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Nov. 11, 2022 - Lex Fridman Podcast
04:15:20
Destiny: Politics, Free Speech, Controversy, Sex, War, and Relationships | Lex Fridman Podcast #337
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If you have a democratic style of governance, you are entrusting people with one of the most awesome and radical of responsibilities.
And that's saying that you're going to pick the people that are going to make some of the hardest decisions in all of human history.
If you're going to trust people to vote correctly, you have to be able to trust them to have open and honest dialogue with each other.
Whether that's Nazis or KKK people or whoever talking, you have to believe that your people are going to be able to rise above and make the correct determinations when they hear these types of speeches.
And if you're so worried that somebody's going to hear a certain political figure and they're going to be completely radicalized instantly, then what that tells me is that you don't have enough faith in humans for democracy to be a viable institution, which is fine.
You can be anti-democratic, but I don't think you can be pro-democracy and anti-free speech.
The following is a conversation with Stephen Bunnell, also known online as Destiny. He's a
video game streamer and political commentator, one of the early pioneers of both live streaming
in general and live streamed political debate and discourse.
Politically, he is a progressive, identifying as either left or far left, depending on your
perspective. There are many reasons I wanted to talk to Stephen.
First, I just talked to Ben Shapiro, and many people have told me that Stephen is the Ben Shapiro of the left in terms of political perspective and exceptional debate skills.
Second reason is he skillfully defends some nuanced, non-standard views, at the same time being pro-establishment, pro-institutions, and pro-Biden, while also being pro-capitalism and pro-free speech.
Third reason is he has been there at the beginning and throughout the meteoric rise of the video game live streaming community.
In some mainstream circles, this community is not taken seriously.
Perhaps because of its demographic distribution skewing young, or perhaps because of the sometimes harsh style of communication.
But I think this community should be taken seriously and shown respect.
Millions of young minds tune in to livestreams like Destiny's to question and to try to understand what is going on with the world, often exploring challenging, even controversial ideas.
The language is sometimes harsher and the humor sometimes meaner than I would prefer.
But I, Grandpa Lex, put on my rain boots and went into the beautiful chaotic muck of online discourse and have so far survived to tell the tale with a smile and even more love in my heart than before.
On top of all this, we were lucky to have Melina Gorenson, a popular streamer and world traveler, join us at the end of the conversation.
You can check out her channel on twitch.tv slash Melina, and you can check out Stephen's channel on youtube.com slash destiny.
This is the Lex Friedman Podcast.
To support it, please check out our sponsors in the description.
And now, dear friends, here's Destiny.
I don't know if you watched me watching your yay interview.
Yeah, thank you so much.
I'm so curious. When you're navigating a conversation like that, how intentional is the thought process between building rapport and pushing and giving a little...
Zero. Zero intention.
I was watching, and thank you so much.
It was very kind for you to review that conversation.
It meant a lot that you were complimenting parts on the technical aspects of the conversation.
But no, zero. And I'm actually deliberately...
Trying to avoid, I think you've called it debate brain, which is just another flavor of thinking about the meta conversation, trying to optimize how should this conversation go.
Because I feel like the more you do that, the better you get at that.
The less human connection you have.
The less genuinely you're actually sitting there in the moment and listening to the person.
You're more like calculating what's the right thing to say versus feeling.
What is that person feeling right now?
What are they thinking? That's what I'm trying to do is putting myself...
In their mind and thinking, what does the world look like to them?
What does the world feel like to them?
And so from that, I truly try to listen.
Now, I'm also learning, especially because Rogan and others have been giving me shit for not pushing back.
It's good sometimes to say, from a place of care for the other human being, to say, stop.
What did you just say?
I don't think that represents who you are and what you really mean.
Or maybe if it does at that time represents who they are, I can see a better world if they grow into a different direction and try to point that direction out to them.
There's a really complicated dance between letting somebody share their full story versus letting somebody, like, essentially, I guess, like, proselytize your audience.
And it's like, okay, hold on, let's take a minute here.
But, yeah, I used to be, four or five years ago, it was attack, attack, attack, attack, attack, whatever you said.
And now I'm leaning way more towards the, like, okay, well, tell me how you feel about everything, and then we'll go from there.
So... A lot of people like my new approach.
Some older fans will watch and they're like, why are you letting this guy just ramble on?
You know he said like five or six wrong things and you're only going to call him out on two of them.
And it's like, it's just different styles of conversation.
Do you do a lot of research beforehand too?
Depending on the conversation, yeah.
So if we're going to talk like vaccines and stuff, yeah, that's a ton of reading and stuff that I never thought I'd know going into it.
If it's a more personal, like political philosophy conversation, there's not as much you can prepare for.
It truly depends on the conversation.
How much are you actually listening to the other person?
I'm always listening. You have to listen, because as soon as you stop listening, the quality of everything falls apart.
The connection disappears, the quality of the conversation disappears.
But my natural inclination is to just be way more aggressive than normal, so I have to constantly remind myself.
I guess you would call it a meta-conversation, but I'm like, okay, he's probably saying this because of that, or we'll let him go here, and then we'll stop later.
But yeah, because my preferred style of conversation is like, I'm going to talk, and the second I say something you disagree with, then let's...
Iron it out, right? I think in like syllogisms, like, okay, here's premise A, good, okay, premise B, okay, and then conclusion.
And then as long as we're both deductively sound, we're not crazy, no psychosis, then we're going to agree on everything.
Whereas other people like to, most people think in stories, like narratives, like a whole, there's a whole like narrative and the individual facts don't matter as much because they'll pick and choose what they want and...
It's really hard because everybody thinks narrative, so I have to function in that world.
But it's frustrating for me sometimes.
Well, I've seen you had a lot of excellent debates.
One of them I just recently last night watched is on systemic racism.
And it's the first time I've seen you completely lose your shit.
Oh, shoot. Who was that against?
I'm not sure exactly, but you were just very frustrated.
Sorry, not lose your shit, but you were frustrated constantly because of the thing, let's lay out one, two, three, and every time you try to lay it out, it would falter.
I think it had to do with sort of, can you use data to make an argument, or do you need to use a study that does an interpretation of that data?
And then there's like this tension between, I think this is a behavioral economist that you were talking to.
The point is, you do this kind of nice layout that the whole point of behavioral economics is that There's more to it than just the data.
You have to give it context and do the rich, rigorous interpretation in the context of the full human story.
And then there was a dance back and forth.
Sometimes you use data, sometimes not, and you're getting really frustrated and shutting down.
And so that felt like a failure mode.
I've seen Sam Harris have similar sticking points.
If we can't agree on the terminology, we can't go on.
To me, I feel like the Wittgenstein perspective is like, I think if you get stuck on any one thing, you're just not going to make progress.
Part of the conversation has to be about doing a good dance together versus being dogmatically stuck on the path to truth.
I think the true challenge is identifying what of those sticking points are important versus what is not important.
It's like if I'm having an argument with somebody about Jewish representation in media, it might be like a big conversation and they might say a couple things.
Like, I think Jewish people, you know, they tend to help their own or whatever, and I'm saying, eh, okay.
But for the purpose of the conversation, we can keep moving.
But if they casually drop, like, you know, yeah, and I think that's why the Holocaust numbers are blown up from like 100,000 to 6 million.
And it's like, okay, well, hold on, wait, wait.
If you think this, we have to stop here because this is going to be, it's not just a language game in this part.
If you really believe this fact, then the whole rest of the conversation is going to be informed by that belief, you know?
And it has to be something that doesn't bother you personally.
You have to step outside your own ego.
So Holocaust denial is somebody that would bother a lot of people.
And there's some things, just observing you, I feel like when you get really good at conversation, you can become a stickler.
bothers you if people don't agree on those terms.
Begs the question, you mean raising the question.
Yeah, I usually just want, people say stuff, I just let it slide, yeah?
Yeah.
Because if you fight, when you're having a conversation with somebody and you're talking to their audience
at the same time, because that's really what's happening, you never want to come off as overcombative
or overaggressive because it puts people in like, there's like a trigger in your brain,
and this is true of relationships, of friendships, of persuasive rhetoric or whatever.
There's a trigger in the brain, and as soon as that defensive trigger gets like flipped on, everything is over.
You've lost the ability to persuade because everything becomes a fight at that point, yeah.
Well, I wanted to talk to you because I heard somewhere that you were referred to as the Ben Shapiro of the left, and since I'm talking with Ben as well, I wanted to sort of complete, spiritually, this platonic political philosophy puzzle in my head.
you are a progressive, but a progressive with many non-standard progressive views,
and you had a heck of a fascinating journey through all of that.
And like I said, I think you argue with passion sometimes, with excessive amounts of passion, but almost-
That's a really polite way of saying that.
Almost always with good faith and with rigor, with seriousness.
I asked on your subreddit, which is an excellent subreddit, shout out to the Destiny subreddit, so much, at least for that particular post.
What I really loved is when I asked for questions for you, they were like, holy shit, there's adults in there, let's all behave.
They're like, nobody say incest.
I was like, what? What's going on here?
But actually, the questions that rose to the top were really good.
So somebody said that Destiny was, speaking of your journey, was a conservative in his early teens.
Then he became a libertarian.
Then he became a left-wing social justice warrior.
Then he flirted with socialism.
And now he is a social democrat, liberal.
I've also heard you refer to yourself as a far-left person.
So to the degree there's truth to that journey, can you take me through your evolution?
So my dad comes from Kentucky, and my mom is a Cuban immigrant.
Cubans are notorious for being very conservative in the United States for historical reasons and for other reasons, but my upbringing was a very Republican one.
I grew up listening to Rush Limbaugh, Glenn Beck, Michael Savage, on the radio Billy Cunningham, I think Sean Hannity a little bit later on, that was my whole upbringing politically.
I remember I was writing I'd written, like, articles for the school journal, like, in favor of defending the war in Iraq and, you know, defending Bush from all the criticism, etc.
So that was my upbringing.
I think once I hit high school, college, I had my edgy, like, libertarian-esque high school phase of, like, reading Ayn Rand, of figuring out that, like, oh my god, nothing in life matters except for class and money.
That's actually the answer to everything.
And I got to college.
I became a Ron Paul fan, very big Ron Paul fan.
And then... From there, I kind of work, do life.
Life happens. At kind of the lowest point of my life in terms of where I'm working, financially, everything is kind of in ruin in my life.
There's a whole bunch of dumb stuff that's happened.
Probably my most conservative point.
I don't know what it is about being poor and thinking you can work your way out of it, you can do whatever.
My upbringing is always just like, if you're not having financial success, just work, work, work, work, work.
And then I got into streaming. Very, very lucky break.
Everything just lined up at the right time.
And then as I've progressed through streaming, I would say through the years, I've gradually fallen more and more to the left, especially once my kid turned four, five, six years old.
And I started to see how much different his life was just because of the financial opportunities that I was able to provide for him through no merit of his own.
And that started to radically change how I viewed the world in a lot of ways.
So actually, let's like linger on that low point.
You worked at McDonald's, you worked at a casino, you did carpet cleaning.
What was the lowest point?
Definitely the carpet cleaning.
Really? Absolutely.
Why was it the lowest point?
That's when you were just flirting with starting streaming?
My whole life has been a series of lucky breaks, really, truly.
I grew up playing a lot of video games, but back in my day, our day, you had to read.
There was a lot of text on the screen.
Back in my day, we used to play...
They didn't all talk to you. Yeah, because nowadays everything's voice acted, but back then you do read a lot.
I was a really good reader and a really good vocabulary.
Yeah, I've heard you actually say that. What games are we talking about?
What do you mean just reading?
You're talking about like RPGs?
Yeah, JRPGs. So like Final Fantasy games, Phantasy Stars, like all of these, like any RPG that would have been on the SNES, Sega, PlayStation.
These are the things I'm... Let's pause on that.
Okay. Okay. I just talked to Todd Howard, who's of the Elder Scrolls fame and the Fallout fame and beyond.
What's your thoughts on Elder Scrolls?
Why is Skyrim the greatest RPG of all time?
Man, I really don't like Skyrim or Fallout.
You don't love it? No, not at all.
Why do you hate Skyrim?
Yeah, so I really like characters and, like, compelling stories and narrators around those characters, and I like to see them kind of, like, grow and change, kind of like a movie or a story.
So in your, like, Final Fantasy games, you've got characters.
There are a lot of, like, classical tropes of, like, a character starts off kind of, like, edgy, angsty, all on their own.
They develop relationships, friendships.
They realize that the life is more about themselves, and they do that.
And I like that growth.
That's kind of what you see in all of those old role-playing games.
I didn't like the open world ones as much because your main character is just like a blank slate, never talks.
It's for you to like project onto.
But there's not the same like linear narrative of like growth for the character.
Oh, that's fascinating. There's an actual story arc to the character that's more crafted in a beautiful way by the designers of the game.
I don't think one is better or worse.
I tend towards like I want to hear a compelling story around like a set of characters that like grow and change.
Oh, that's beautifully put then.
Yeah, I just really loved being able to leave the town We're good to go.
There's just like a lot of random skills you pick up depending on the type of game you play.
I played a lot of text-based games on the computer, so I was a very fast typer.
I'm still a very fast typer. Read a lot, you know, learned weird kind of math stuff for some of the calculations, some of the games.
I think I'm pretty good at getting information, figuring stuff out, learning patterns, all of that.
And then that plus the reading and everything with the games meant that I... I don't want to say I excelled in school because my grades were pretty bad, but I was in like all honors, all AP classes or whatever.
A lot of dual enrollment, a lot of AP credit going into college.
So I did pretty well in school, probably better than I should have, but it was because I had the game stuff that was like really powering a lot of my brain there while I was trying to sleep through class.
So you're able to soak in information, integrate it, quickly take notes?
Generally, I think I'm pretty good at that, yeah.
You do this a lot when you stream, you're typing stuff.
Is there a system in that note-taking?
And what do you use for note-taking?
Does it matter? I use Notepad.exe, not the plus plus.
Is there genius to the madness behind that, or you just don't give a shit?
No, I mean, like, it's gonna depend on the style of conversation.
If I'm with somebody that is very meticulously organized their thoughts, and they're a,
find a better word here for rambler, you can edit that in, better word for rambler,
somebody that talks a lot and a lot, I'll start like, taking notes, bullet points,
like this, this, this, this, this, this, this, because there's a style of conversation
where I say seven or eight different things, and then when you go to respond to everything I said,
I cut you off immediately, and we argue that point.
But if somebody's gonna do that, you're just like, hold on, you just said these eight things,
I'm gonna respond to every single one, I've written them all down, and then you can go,
if you wanna go point by point, we can, but you just said all this, and I wrote it down,
so now we're gonna go.
So what are you actually writing down, like a couple of words per point they left?
Honestly, there are very few unique conversations in politics.
A lot of them are kind of retreading old ground.
So if we're having a debate on abortion, somebody might say, oh, well, I believe this thing about viability, and I believe this thing about when they're a fetus versus a human, and I'll just write down those points so that when I go to respond, I kind of have note cards, like a guiding thing there to keep me centered on my response.
Political discourse is the kind of tree you're walking down, and I got it.
And you're taking... Just to keep my focus guided so I'm not running off on a weird tangent or responding to something I didn't say or something.
What about doing research?
Is there a system to your note-taking?
Because mentally you seem to be one of the most organized people I've listened to.
So is it in your mind or is there a system that's on paper?
A little of both. I feel like the human mind is a beautiful thing if you have interest in an area.
So like what I'll tell people is, let's say there's like a totally new topic that I'm researching.
I don't know anything. And I'll do a couple of these on stream.
I think they're boring, but people watch it.
I might open a Wikipedia article and I'll read and I hit something I don't know.
And then I open the next Wikipedia article and I'll read it.
And then I might have like seven tabs open and I'll read and I'll read and I'll read.
And I'll read a ton of stuff, maybe for an hour, two, three, four hours of stuff.
And then by the end, you know, someone in chat will ask me, like, do you even remember, like, this particular thing?
And I'll say, not really.
No, not too much.
But what happens is, as long as you've seen it once, what'll happen is, like, the next day, the day after, we'll read something else and be like, oh, I remember that thing from this thing.
I remember vaguely that.
And then if you see it a third time, you're like, oh, this makes sense because especially when it comes to—oh, here's a little trick on stuff.
If you're ever reading any news and there's a place that pops up, always look at it on a map because so much of history is on a map.
It's so important to know the geography.
It makes things make so much more sense.
But yeah, once I start to see stuff over and over again, just because I've like read it a few times, stuff will start to kind of connect to my mind and like, oh yeah, well this makes sense.
Of course these people believe this because of this.
Or of course like this happened here.
It's because, you know, that happened there.
So yeah, it's a lot of that.
If there's like a topic that I'm doing specific research for, so like vaccine related stuff is a big one.
The Ukrainian-Russian conflict is a big one.
That, I'll break out a note.
I'll probably get, like, a Google Doc, and I'll just start, like, writing, like, an outline of kind of the rough points of everything just to organize my thoughts around different topics, yeah.
We're just going to go a tangent upon a tangent upon a tangent, and we'll return to the low point of your life at some point.
Okay, sure. Always returning from the philosophy to the psychology.
So you did the Ukraine topic.
One question is...
What role does U.S. play in this war?
Could they have done something to avoid the war?
Did they have a role to play in forcing Vladimir Putin's hand?
Do they have a role to play in de-escalating the war towards a peace agreement and the opposite?
If it does escalate towards something like the use of a tactical nuclear weapon, are they to blame?
Are we to blame?
Oh man, somebody sent me an email a while ago with great words.
There's a specific way to navigate a conversation where you can kind of like contribute to a negative event, but you're not really the one responsible for it.
Like the classic example is a woman goes out late at night, gets a little bit too drunk, and then something happens.
And it's like while there might have been steps she could have taken to mitigate the risk, it's not her fault of what happened because the responsibility rests on the agent making the choice, right?
There's a chooser at some point that is choosing to do wrong or evil.
Yeah.
Russia's position on Ukraine or the actions that they've taken on Ukraine.
There are several arguments that some people, some even political scholars, are putting
out there to say that the United States is to blame, but I find them completely unconvincing.
I think that when you ask the question of, like, what is the United States' role or what
has our role been?
I think it's really important for us.
I don't think we even agree as a country on what our role should be, which I think is a hard one because you've got this kind of, there's this growing populist movement in the United States.
It might be the far left and the far right.
And I think populists tend to have this kind of isolationist view of the world where the
United States should just be our own thing.
We shouldn't be telling anybody what to do.
We shouldn't be the world police.
And then kind of more in these like center-left, center-right positions and then across a lot
of Europe, you've got, well, okay, the United States is kind of like the big kid on the
block.
Like we're looking to them for guidance and leadership on situations like what's going
on in Ukraine.
So insofar as the original question is like, what is like the United States responsibility?
I think we have a responsibility to ensure the relative freedom, prosperity, and stability across Europe.
I think that defending Ukraine's sovereignty and right to their borders is a part of that.
And I don't believe that prior to the invasion in 2022, I don't think the United States was contributing to Russia invading that country.
I know there are arguments given that like the expansion of NATO, you know, has something that's been threatening to Russia, but the Baltics joined and Russia didn't do anything about it.
The invasion to Crimea was very clearly a response to the revolution in 2014.
The invasion on the borders is clearly a response to Ukraine winning that civil war in the southeast and the Donbass and Russia becoming more aggressive.
I don't think that you can blame any of that on NATO expansion.
There's no NATO countries that are threatening Russia or invading Russia.
Do you think there is a nuclear threat?
Do you think about this?
Do you worry about this, that there is a threat of a tactical nuclear weapon being dropped?
I think that possibility exists either way, and I think the responsibility for that is on Russia.
Because it just can't be the case that if you have nukes, you're allowed to invade countries and take their land.
Because if anything, I think that that down the road also increases the potential for nuclear problems in the future, right?
Because at that point, either every single country has to acquire their own nuclear weapons, because if you don't, Russia's going to mess with you, or every single country has to join NATO, and now what?
We're back at square zero, ground zero, square one, where people are like, oh, well, look, all these countries joining NATO is aggressive towards Russia.
Like, what are you going to do? Yeah, you've mentioned that there's a complicated calculus going on with the countries that have nuclear weapons.
And what's our responsibility?
Are you allowed to do anything you want to countries that don't have nuclear weapons?
That's a really tricky discussion.
For sure. Because what is U.S. supposed to do if Russia drops a tactical nuclear weapon?
There's a set of options.
None of which are good.
And it's such a tricky moment right now because the things that Biden and other public figures say, I feel like has a significant impact on the way this game turns out.
Because I think mutually assured destruction is partially a game of words.
I mean, I believe in the power of conversation.
Of leaders talking to each other.
I feel like you have to have a balance between threat and compromise and empathy for the needs, the geopolitical, the economic needs of a nation, but also respect and represent your own interests.
It's a tricky one.
How do you play the hand?
It reminds me of, I don't know if you've ever heard in evolutionary psych or evolutionary biology, there are things called tit-for-tat strategies.
It kind of reminds me of that, where it's like, there are a whole bunch of these little biological mechanisms where creatures will develop, like socializing, like tit-for-tat.
If you do something bad to me, I'm going to do something bad for you.
And then more complicated schemes will come out where it'll be like tit-tit-for-tat, where it's like you can make one mistake, and then I'm going to get you if you do a second one, or it could be tit-tit-tit-for-tat, or there could be tit-for-tat-tat-for-tat.
There's like all these back and forths where creatures kind of optimize themselves.
Yeah, I think something the United States did really well in terms of that kind of conversational strategy, and I approved of this in the beginning, was Biden was very clear about setting out the exact level of US involvement for the war.
We're not going to do a no-fly zone.
There's not going to be US troops on the ground in Ukraine, but we are going to send a whole bunch of money and a whole bunch of arms and a whole bunch of intel to them.
And I thought he did a good job at laying out the limitation of the US involvement while opening as much as we could in the ways that we could help.
But the, yeah, that looming threat of some sort of tactical nuclear weapon, I think on the table right now is like, it's going to be the annihilation of like Russian sea forces and everything.
But, you know, what happens if it continues to escalate?
That's like a world that nobody wants to, nobody wants to be in.
Yeah. So we talked about difficult conversations.
And again, thank you so much for reviewing the EA conversation.
Let me ask you about Putin.
Mm-hmm. Speaking of difficult conversations, so if you sit down, if I sit down with somebody like Vladimir Putin or Vladimir Zelensky, what's the right way to have that conversation?
We can talk about that one, or we could talk about somebody more well understood through history, like Stalin or Hitler, somebody like that.
Maybe that's an easier example to illustrate how to handle extremely difficult conversations.
Yeah, I mean, I can handle really difficult conversations between, like, two people.
Leaders of countries, though, there's so much that you are representing in that conversation.
I guess the thing that would be interesting to me would be, like, what is Vladimir Putin's interest?
Like, what is the genuine interest that he has in the conflict?
Because I think finding out, like, what is your buy-in or what is your, like, what is the driving force keeping you here is probably the most important thing.
I think for Zelensky, I think it's quite a bit more simpler because he's on the defense, so it's defending his country and his people.
For Putin, I've heard all sorts of things.
Dugan has his writings on the East versus the West, the collapse of the West in the face of all of the liberalism and the weird LGBT stuff that they criticize.
You've got... The desire to return to this former Soviet Union-esque thing.
You've got Putin's quotes that the collapse of the Soviet Union was the biggest geopolitical disaster of the 20th century.
I guess figuring out, what is Putin after?
I'm not actually sure. I don't know the answer to that question.
I know a lot of people write about it, but yeah.
Well, there's a lot of answers to that question.
There's a lot of answers that he can give to that question.
So say I sit down with him for three hours and talk about it.
I think this is a really interesting distinction because you do do difficult conversations in the space of ideas.
But also in your stream, you have, I mean, there's a bunch of drama going on, there's a human psychology is laid out in its full richness before you.
So to me, with leaders, I think a part of the conversation has to be about the human psychology.
Sure. Not like a meta conversation, but really understand what they feel, what they fear, who they are as a human being.
As a family man, as a person proud of their country, as a person with an ego, as a person who's been affected, if not corrupted by power, as all of us can be and likely are.
So all of that.
That gives context to then the answers about what do you want in this war.
Because the answers about what you want in this war will be political answers.
It's like a game that's being played, again, with words.
And politicians are incredibly good at playing that game.
I think the deeper truth comes from understanding the human being from which those words come.
And I think that's what you do.
I don't know if you do those kinds of conversations where...
I've never talked to any country leader, so...
No, not a country leader, but say a controversial figure or somebody that represents a certain idea.
Don't just talk in the space of ideas or challenge the ideas, but understand who is this person?
How did you come to those ideas?
Oh, yeah. When I've had, there have been a couple of very controversial right-leaning figures.
So the two, obviously, that my stream is for me, they're Lauren Southern and Nick Fuentes.
And those types of conversations initially aren't very political at all.
Yeah, it's more like, like, obviously, we believe in very, very, very different things, but like, beliefs don't happen accidentally.
So how did you get to where you are?
Those are way more personal conversations.
That's true, yeah. Is there things you regret about those conversations where you failed?
Is there things you're proud of where you succeeded?
For things that I'm proud of, I feel like I'm really good at attempting to understand people without judgment.
That I think a lot of people feel like they can have conversations with me where they can share a lot and I'm not gonna jump down their throat for them having a politically incorrect observation or for them being judgmental to somebody else or having like a feeling that's maybe not something they should have, something they're embarrassed about.
So I think I do a really good job at that.
And then by extension of that, I've gotten the ability to hear perspectives from so many different people that I think I can understand a lot of different perspectives.
For failures of mine, I mean, it's always going to be on stream.
It'll be like I didn't push back hard enough or I didn't know a certain fact for a conversation.
These are usually the...
They're going to be on these very technical grounds generally.
I'm pretty happy with the direction my conversations have gone recently, especially over the past six months.
So your goal is to...
de-radicalize the audience of those folks.
So that used to be my goal.
My goal was de-radicalization.
Now I'm kind of hoping that that's just the byproduct.
So the goal, I think, is to talk to somebody and to show they believe this because of these reasons.
And if you want to change people's beliefs, we have to talk about the underlying reasons for why they think the things
they think.
It's not enough to just say, like, that belief is bad, because it's like, well, they believe it for a whole bunch
of things that are true and real to them, at least.
So you have to address all of the underlying things that they believe before you can change the overlying belief.
So if I'm having a conversation with somebody, it'll be like, okay, why do you feel this about that, that, and that?
Okay, I understand that.
Maybe like a better way to solve that would be like this or that instead of this thing.
So to what degree do you have to empathize with the person's worldview versus pushback?
That's always the hard one.
When I'm talking to other people, it's almost always me stepping as much inside their bubble as I can.
I have to live and breathe their worldview and be able to speak their worldview in order to navigate their thoughts.
Because my worldview is—I'm not even used as an insult.
I don't know if I am a little bit autistic or something, but when I break apart things, I just want to see study, study, study, fact, fact, fact— That's how my mind works for everything.
That's what I like to see.
Personal stories don't do much for me.
Narratives don't do much for me. Just show me the data and the studies or whatever.
But for other people, I think most brains are more human than that, and they tend to see things in more surreal pictures that are painted, and the brush strokes are way broader, and they don't care about the itty-bitty tiny fact.
So if I'm talking to somebody else and I'm trying to get into their head and I'm trying to change their mind on things, I'm going to be stepping into their world and I'm going to try to be working through that framework.
Really good example might be, we'll say like when it comes to trans issues for minors, okay?
16 or 17-year-old needs to get on puberty blockers.
The way that I want that debate to play out is let's look at all the data.
Let's see what are the outcomes.
Let's see what are the processes for getting a medication.
And then we'll evaluate all of that and then we'll go in whatever, like, points more favorably.
But that's wholly unconvincing to most people, right?
So as a parent, if I'm having that conversation with another parent, the easiest way for me to have that conversation is like, hey, we both have kids.
Imagine how horrible it would be if we felt like our kids needed help and the government was trying to get between us and their doctor in that conversation.
That might be how that talk plays out, which I think that's a really good argument.
Because I think there probably are times when the government should get in between.
But I'll have that conversation because now I'm in a world where they understand what I'm saying.
I'm resonating with the way that they feel about things.
And then I can make progress with the way that they're kind of viewing the world because I'm talking in a language they understand.
So on this particular topic of trans issues, is that the reason you were banned from Twitch?
I'm not sure. I don't know.
They just said hate speech, but I don't use like slurs or anything.
So it's hard to know exactly. So I think you made the claim that trans women shouldn't compete with cis women in women's athletics.
Can you make this case and can you steelman the case against it?
I think in your community there's a lot of trans folks who love you and there's a lot who hate you.
Yeah. And so if you can walk the tightrope of this conversation to try to steelman both sides.
One of the argumentative strategies I say is that any time you have a conversation, you should be able to argue both sides better than anybody else.
For my side, the genuine belief side, it feels like overwhelmingly all of the data is showing that trans, mostly trans women, even after I think three years on some sort of HRT or estrogen stuff, they're still maintaining these advantages from their male
puberty over cisgender women.
And if that is the case, if we are going to draw these distinctions around our sports between women
and men, it feels unfair to have a category inside the women's sports that are maintaining
advantages that are coming from a male puberty, regardless of the amount of time they've spent on
hormone replacement therapy. So that would be my argument on that side.
So it's unfair from a performance enhancement aspect.
So the same way we ban performance enhancing drugs that involve increasing of testosterone in that same way would be unfair.
Essentially, yeah. So what's the case against this?
So the case in favor of them competing together is that, realistically, there's not going to be a trans sports category.
Realistically, trans women aren't going to be competitive with cis men because they've gone through these huge hormone changes by the medication they're taking.
And that when we look at how sports are kind of done anyway, there's a whole bunch of biological differences between people within sports categories that are determining their placement in the professional world.
So, for instance, somebody like me is probably never going to go far in the NBA because I'm not tall enough.
I think the average height in the NBA— Don't doubt yourself.
Don't doubt myself, yeah. I want to say it's like six or something.
They're huge people.
Yeah. Or, you know, you look at, like, Michael Phelps is a classic example of a guy whose torso is, like, so long.
His body is built for swimming.
And I think there are some trans people that will look at that or somebody advocating for this position.
They'll look at that and go, okay, realistically, the way that Michael Phelps' body processes lactic acid, the shape physiologically of his body is going to put him in a level of competition that so many men are never going to reach just because of biology.
How is it fair that you can have these biological outliers competing in these categories, but then when we come to sports categories with trans and cis women, you're going to take trans women and say that they can't compete against cis women?
Can't you also just say that they have some level of biological difference there?
Is it really going to be that great of a difference than what Michael Phelps has versus the average swimmer or an NBA player has versus the average height male?
Yeah. Do you think we're going to get into some tricky ethical territory as we start to be able to, through biology and genetics, modify the human body?
Absolutely. I feel like those things are coming sooner than we wanted them to.
Oh, man, dude, have you seen the AI art?
Yes. Of course.
I'm an AI person. Oh, okay, then yeah.
That's always been like, what's going to happen when robots can do art better than humans, lol?
Like, well, we'll see in 20 years, in 20 years, in 20 years.
And now you have AI art winning competitions.
And it's funny because...
Robots are essentially...
There's a robot behind you, by the way.
A robot behind me. Oh, nice.
Robots are really good at...
Careful what you say. Yeah. Oh, God, I'll be careful.
That's not like one of the Chinese ones with a gun on it, right?
Oh, okay. Hopefully not.
We'll see, depending on what you say.
Okay. Robots are really good at showing the limitations of the human mind in categories that we didn't believe we were limited before.
I think that humans have this idea intrinsically that we have like some type of like innovative
creative drive that is just outside of the bounds of physical understanding.
And with a sophisticated enough program, we see that maybe that's not actually true.
And that's a really scary thing philosophically to deal with because we feel like we're very
special, right?
We own the planet.
We make computers.
And the idea that you can start to get these robots that can do things that's like, okay,
you can do math.
Okay, you can do calculations, fine.
But you can't do art. That's the human stuff.
And then when they start to do that, it's like, oh, shoot.
And that terrifies you a little bit?
Like the human species losing control of our dominance over this earth?
I don't think it's necessarily losing control of our dominance.
I mean, I guess a Skynet thing could come in at some point.
But I think it brings us to this really fundamental level of what does it mean to be human?
What is it that we're good at?
What should we be doing with technology?
We never really ask that question in the Western world.
It's always the technology is normative in that technology equals good and more technology equals better.
That's been the default assumption.
In fact, if you ask a lot of people, how do you know civilization has progressed over the past 100 or 200 years?
They don't say, we have better relationships, we have longer marriages, blah, blah, blah.
They'll say, technology has improved. We've got crazy phones, we've got crazy computers.
And the idea that more technology might be bad has never even crossed somebody's mind, unless it's used for a really bad thing.
Well, it's interesting.
We kind of think as more and more automation is happening, we're going to get more and more meaning from things like being artists and doing creative pursuits.
And here's like, oh shit, if the art, if the creative pursuits are also being automated, then what are we gonna gain meaning from?
What are the activities from which we'll gain meaning?
My whole life I've been working on artificial intelligence systems.
There's been different revolutions.
One of them is the machine learning revolution and it's interesting to build up intuition and destroy that intuition about what is and isn't solvable by machines.
I think for the longest time I grew up thinking the game of Go is not solvable because my understanding of AI systems is ultimately that it's It's fundamentally a search mechanism that is fundamentally going to be brute force.
There's no shortcuts.
Sure. Like if it can't solve the traveling salesman problem, it's not even going to be able to give you an approximation.
So most interesting problems are a giant travel salesman problem.
So of course it's not going to be able to solve that.
Then the deep learning revolution made you realize, holy shit, these large neural networks with a giant number of knobs is able to actually somehow estimate functions that can Do a pretty good job of understanding deep representation of a thing, whether that's a game of Go or whether it's the human natural language or if it's images and video or audio and even actions in different video games and actions of robotics and so on.
And then you realize with diffusion models and different generative models, you start to realize, holy shit, it can actually generate not just interesting Representations or interesting manifestations of the representations and forms, but it's able to do something that impresses humans in its creativity.
It's beautiful in the way we think of art as beautiful, like it surprises us and makes us chuckle and makes us sit back in awe and all those kinds of things.
And yet the thing that it seems to struggle with the most is the physical world currently.
So that's counterintuitive.
We humans think that it's pretty trivial, being able to pick up a cup, being able to write with a pen, like in the physical space, we think that's trivial.
We give ourselves respect for being great artists and great mathematicians and all that kind of stuff, and that seems to be much easier than the physical space.
Bodies are really cool.
Yeah. Just with our hands and, you know, the way that we can interact with things around us.
And yeah, we're very capable on like a physical level, even though, like you said, we think about ourselves like, oh, well, human beings have really big brains.
And we do. We're really intelligent as well.
But yeah, our bodies are pretty cool, too.
And it's a fascinating hierarchical biological system.
We're made up of a bunch of different living organisms that all don't know about the big picture of our body.
And it's all functioning in its own little local world and it's doing its thing.
But together it forms a super resilient system.
All of that comes from A very compressed encoding of what makes a human.
You start with the DNA and it builds up from a single cell to a giant organism.
And because of the DNA, through the evolution process, you can...
Constantly create new humans and new living organisms that adapt to the environment.
That resilience to the physical world, it seems like running the whole Earth over again, the whole evolutionary process over again, might be the only way to do it.
So to create a robot that actually adapts, is as resilient to the dynamic world, might be a really difficult problem.
Possibly. Well, I was going to say, in a programming environment, you can do things on timescales that are impossible in the real world, right?
The benefit to AI and computers is that computationally, they can compute so much data so quickly.
Whereas on human timetables, we have to wait.
When you talk about evolution, it's generation after generation after generation.
Maybe in a virtual environment, that could be simulated.
And then those changes could happen a lot quicker.
Well, that's not a human time scale, but you have to look at Earth as a quantum mechanical system.
The computation is happening super fast.
This is a giant computer doing a giant simulation.
So just because for us humans it's slow, there's like trillions of organisms involved in you, destiny being you.
Sure. But the next iteration of, like, from human to human, even if on the quantum level there's a lot of stuff going on, you talk about, like, changes in DNA, for instance, right?
Like, that's happening from a generation-to-generation timescale.
Like, in a virtual environment, that could theoretically happen.
Well, it already is. There's, like, protein folding, like, huge cloud computing, probably ML stuff that's, like, working on doing all of that stuff, and it'll run, like, trillions and trillions of simulations, you know, every second and stuff.
Maybe not every second, but...
Still slower than the actual protein folding, much slower.
That's for the problem of solving protein folding to estimate the 3D structure, but the actual body does the actual protein folding way faster.
So like we're, The question is, can we shortcut the simulation of human evolution, try to figure out how to build up an organism without simulating all the details?
Because we have to simulate all the details of biology, we're screwed.
We don't have... Oh, sure, we'd have to put something in a pond and then watch it for a billion years.
That might be the most efficient way to do it.
Sure. That's what the universe most likely is.
It's a kind of simulation created by a teenager in their basement to try to see what happens.
It's a computer game.
That might be the most efficient way to create interesting organisms.
But within the system is perhaps possible to create Other robots that will be of use and will entertain us in the way that other humans entertain us.
And that's a really interesting, of course, problem.
But it's surprising how difficult it has been to create systems that operate in the physical world.
And operate in that physical world in a way that's safe to humans and interesting to humans.
Because there's also the human factor, the human-robot interaction.
To me, that's like the most interesting problem, to figure out how to do that well.
And so Elon Musk and others, Boston Dynamics, have worked on legged robots, so I really care about legged robots.
Those are super interesting.
How to make them such that they're...
Able to operate successfully in a dynamic environment.
Super tricky. They're like the dumbest of dogs.
Speaking of which, there's a dog barking outside.
It's really tricky to create those kinds of organisms that live in the human world.
Then again, if more and more of us move into the digital world, so you stream a lot, like part of who you are Exists in the digital space.
The fact that you have a physical representation also, maybe more and more will become not important.
I hope that's the case, because I bought a lot of stock in Meta, and man, it's down a lot.
Meta the company? Yeah.
Is there some degree, like, can you look at yourself, like, Steven, the physical meat vehicle, and then the destiny, this digital space, like, digital...
Avatar. Do you sense that in a certain way you're the digital avatar?
I've always tried to keep my on-stream personality as genuine as possible, so they're one and the same to me.
I don't really view them as two separate entities, so...
But I mean, I always view myself as Steven, the real-life person.
Destiny's my online name, but...
No, but because so many...
Your social network is established through the digital space.
Like, so many people know you through the digital space.
Can there be... Can we swap out another person that looks like you in, like, an AI system?
And then that entity known as Destiny will continue existing.
There must be some level of sophistication that could emulate a human brain, I would imagine, right?
The tech's not there yet, but...
Well, the question is, what's the level of sophistication of the audience that would recognize that something has changed?
Like, it's the Turing test.
Yeah. How hard is it to trick your audience, your large audience of fans that watch your streams, that when you swap out an AI that emulates you, that nothing has changed?
And the question is, do you have to really simulate so much of the human brain for that?
I don't think so. Probably not.
So, I mean, like you said, a lot of political discourse is just walking down the tree together, so you can probably emulate a lot of that discussion.
Yeah, it would depend on if you're doing old data sets and you're training on that and I'm having conversations about abortion and Ukrainian vaccines, I imagine it could do it for quite a while.
The only thing that would be weird is when novel issues pop up, then you probably need a more sophisticated resemblance of the inner brain, right?
You have to keep training on the internet.
So how the language models, and that's the most incredible breakthrough is the language models.
You just have to keep retraining the system on Reddit, which is actually what a lot of it is trained on, which is hilarious.
I do think it's really interesting that funny problems like the trolley problem that we can work through our normative ethical systems on are now real questions.
If you're driving a Tesla and it's on autopilot and you're going to hit somebody but it can swerve and hit somebody else, what ought the system do?
We went very quickly from fun project and philosophy class to we need to solve this for insurance purposes as quickly as possible.
It's interesting to think about.
Actually, I'll bring up the trolley problem with you later.
There's a fascinating version of it that I find hilarious.
Okay, let's return to your low point.
Oh, yeah. You started playing video games.
That was a lucky break. You did text-based ones.
That was a lucky break because you got to be pretty good at learning.
And then you started thinking about going to college and so on.
What happened next? I mean, I went to like a prep school, so you kind of have to go to college after.
That's like the point, right? I was also a millennial.
All of us had to go to college.
That's always what they told us. So my life was kind of, it's hard to describe.
I didn't really think much of the future.
I was just kind of enjoying the day-to-day because everything in my life was pretty weird.
Both my parents had moved to Florida by the time I was 16, 17.
I was living with my grandma. I was working.
I had a girlfriend, moved out.
We got a place, did college.
By the time I got into college, I had transitioned from working at McDonald's to I was like working in a casino restaurant, basically.
And I was really good at that job.
So high level of patience for drunk people, insane people.
And I was doing music in school because I've really grown to love music.
And my kind of thought process was I can do music as a hobby, I guess, unless I get really good and maybe I can make money with that.
But otherwise, I love music. I'm okay going to school for music, getting good at it, and then just doing that on the side.
And then my main job would kind of be this career I was building at the casino.
And basically, trying to balance personal life plus graveyard shift, six hour weeks at a casino, and then a full-time music degree was not possible for me.
And eventually, I had to drop school after, I think it was like three years.
And after I dropped school to maintain my casino job, after a few months, I got fired from my casino job.
So I'd essentially just thrown away the past three or four years of my life.
Why'd you get fired from the casino job?
I heard there's a story behind that.
Yeah, there's a story. Basically, I was just really dumb when it came to understanding corporate politics.
And this is funny because the same attitude kind of followed me into the streaming world.
My thought process has kind of always been that, like, as long as I'm really good at what I do, I should be untouchable.
If I'm really good, you can't do anything to me.
I don't have to play any dumb games or whatever.
And at the casino, I think I was the youngest.
It was originally shiftly, then supervisor position at the casino.
And when I started to get my own shifts, there were problems that I would run into on graveyard shift because of carryover from the swing shift.
I remember one of these problems was underneath the soda machine.
They weren't cleaning it properly and fruit flies were showing up.
And the manager came in one morning and she was like, hey, what's going on with the machine?
And I was like, listen, I can't take everything from Swing Shift and do everything in Graveshift.
I can't do this. They need to figure out their stuff better or I need more employees.
It's not possible for me. And she's like, what did you tell anybody else?
I was like, yeah, I complain to the supervisor on the Swing Shift all the time.
And she told me, if you're not getting the answer that you like, then it's your responsibility to email the next person up.
And I was like, oh, okay, that's interesting.
And some months went on and I ran into more problems because on Graveyard, here's how, I don't know if it's everywhere, but morning shift is the easiest and that's when you're the most overstaffed because that's when all the VPs are in and that's when all the managers are there and everybody blah, blah, blah.
Swing shift is the most challenging.
That's where your highest flow of customers is.
You're also decently staffed there, but there's a lot of stuff going on.
And Graveyard, nobody cares at all about you.
They don't give you any employees. You might get swamped.
You might not. Who cares? Make sure it's clean for day shift.
That's the only thing that matters. Okay. Quick question for sort of clarification.
So this is a 24-hour?
24-hour diner, yeah. It's a casino, yeah.
So it's a diner in a casino.
Oh, by the way, I had an amazing moment at a diner in a casino recently.
It's a special place.
A diner in a casino is a place of magic.
There's a lot of, I don't know if I say magic, but there's a lot of otherworldly stuff going on.
There's characters, there's...
And I had an interaction with a waitress that was the sweetest waitress in the world.
And I was just like, I don't know, it made me feel less alone on this...
Cruel world of ours.
So graveyard begins when?
For me, my shift was 10 p.m.
to 6 a.m. Or sometimes I get called in early, so it'd be 8 p.m.
to 6 a.m. That's no love for that shift.
No, especially not trying to do school at the same time.
Absolutely not. But yeah, basically, long story short, I ran into a problem where I didn't have enough employees on my shift.
VPs were coming in in the morning.
They're like, hey, the diner's kind of dirty.
And I'm like, you've cut all my employees past 4 a.m.
Like, on some nights, I'm literally cooking and doing front of house, like, all on my own.
Like, I can't do this. And my manager, Pam, told me, well, you've got to figure it out.
And so I remembered her advice.
So I emailed the VP of food and beverage and I CC'd her.
And I said, I'm not getting the help I need on my restaurant.
Now, I didn't know at the time that I was basically completely throwing her under the bus because of that email.
But retroactively, when I look back on things, or retrospectively, I see that was the moment that I got like marked for deletion.
And I didn't really understand it, even though I'd heard terminology for papering somebody out the door.
But after that point, I started to get written up for like a lot of little random things.
Like I'd missed one day of work in my three years at the casino.
And I started to get written up for like showing up like one or two minutes late.
That's kind of weird. That's whatever.
Or written up for random ways about filing paperwork.
And then eventually there came a situation with another employee where they were...
It's complicated. It has to do with like call-out stuff.
But basically they wanted to come or they wanted to call out.
And I told them if they called out, they were going to get fired because...
They were at like 10 points.
They were at 9 points and 10 points is firing, blah, blah, blah.
Pam told me, you can tell her that she's going to get a point, but you can't tell her she's going to get fired.
I don't know what that meant. And then I told her that if you call out, you're going to get, you know, you're fucked, you're going to get fired, or you're going to be at 10 points.
And then I got called in early, like three days later, and Pam was like, you inappropriately communicated with an employee because you said the F word in a text message.
And I'm like, really? There's no shot.
And she's like, well, you also tried to fire the employee.
And I was like, no, I told her she was going to get 10 points.
She's like, well, you used the F word.
I'm like... This is insane.
Just because I was such a high-performing employee.
There's no way I'm getting fired. And then I did.
And I was like, yeah. Cashed out my 401k and moped for like three months because I had thrown away school for this casino job.
And then I got fired from this job that like, yeah, nobody believed I got fired.
It was just insane. So if you look back, if you were allowed to not just to Look back to your own memory, but actually watch yourself.
Somebody recorded a video that whole time.
Do you think you would be surprised, you would notice some things, potentially, of not having a self-awareness, not having a civility and social etiquette that's played in the human relations?
Yeah, absolutely. So is that at the core of it, essentially?
Yeah, I think so. I mean, it follows me even to this day.
There's a lot of, I don't know if you're recording or not, but when we spoke earlier about, like, meta-conversations, I have to think a lot sometimes about meta-conversations, because the way that I want to drive a conversation will sometimes be way different than what is, like, the best way to have a conversation, whereas I just want to, like, go really hard on, like, some itty-bitty, like, some idiosyncrasy, some factor figure, whatever, but that's not, like, the human conversation I need to have, you know?
Yeah. So you got fired, slash left that job, and that took you to the job that would be the lowest point.
Yeah. Because there was a huge downgrade in pay.
I went from getting like, I think at the casino, because I worked so much overtime.
I was getting like $22.50 an hour on all my overtime.
And this was back in 2008, 2009, as like a college...
Student, like, it was amazing pay.
I had benefits, like, everything was good.
And then the carpet cleaning was, like, I was probably getting my paycheck, like, every other week was maybe $1,500 or $1,000.
And I'm working, like, 13-day stretches.
Like, I have every other Sunday off.
And it's so many hours.
Like, I have to show up at the shop at, like, 7 or 6.
And then I go home at like eight or nine, depending on when my jobs are throughout the day.
Are you doing businesses or residential or what are you doing?
Everything. Everything.
Are you working for a company that's copper cleaning?
Yeah. Okay, so like there's a schedule thing.
You have to go to it and so on.
Yeah, but so like this is why the schedule would suck.
Because sometimes I'd show up at...
I think we had to be in the shop at, I think it was 7am.
We show up at the shop at 7am.
First job might be at 8 or 9, but that job might be like a one hour job.
So I might show up at 7am and have a job from 8.30 to 9.30.
Then my next job might not be from, until like say 11.
So from 8.30 to 9.30 I'll do one job.
And then I've got a job from like 11 to 12 or something.
Then I might have like a decent job from like 5 to 8.
But like my whole day is destroyed.
And I'm doing like three smallest jobs, so I'm getting like 30 bucks maybe for being in the shop or at my job for like 10 or 11 hours, and it's just like horrible.
So you're somebody that seems to be extremely good at thinking and conversation, and so have a bit of an ego, perhaps, in both the negative and the positive sense of that word.
Was there some aspect of working at McDonald's and then working at the casino and then working as a carpet cleaner that was humbling?
No, never. The ego burned bright through it all.
Or no, you can push back on the ego.
Yeah, no, I understand. I totally get what you mean.
I had a really close friend growing up whose name was Chris.
And I think we probably met when he was, we were like four or five, I think.
He lived behind me. And I grew up with him and I'd always been kind of an outsider to the world that I was in once I got to high school for sure.
Because all of those kids were incredibly wealthy.
You know, Corvettes and Mustangs when they turned 16.
It was a prep school. And I was doing the, they had like a work study program there where you could stay after school from 2.30 to 5 every day to kind of like work to pay for your tuition.
So I've been working like throughout all of high school.
I got another job at McDonald's when I was 18, worked at the casino.
Like I'd always been doing that kind of work.
I never really viewed it as beneath me or anything.
I don't have a family of doctors or lawyers or anything.
And then me and my other friend, Chris Guy, we'd always make fun of everybody else for being preppy kids and everything.
So there's some pride to that sort of hard work.
Yeah, I guess a little bit, yeah.
Especially my dad, the solution to every problem was to just throw more hours of work at it, basically.
So that was always my go-to.
So what was psychologically the low point?
I think psychologically the low point was that as I'm doing this carpet cleaning job, driving around my city, there's this feeling of...
I guess for a lot of people it's probably college, but there's a feeling when you're in high school that everything is like so exciting and the whole world is kind of in front of you and there are a trillion, trillion different branching paths of possibilities.
And, you know, even through high school you're thinking like, am I going to be a doctor or a lawyer or can I join the MBA or can I do this or that?
There's all these things in front of you.
And when I, I especially felt it when I was doing those carpet cleaning jobs and, um, I think it was in the fall.
I'd be outside some of these houses and I'd just kind of look around.
And I'd recognize a lot of these neighborhoods that I'd drive around with friends in or I'd be walking through.
I ran cross-country. Some of them I'd be running through these neighborhoods.
And it was just kind of like this feeling of looking around and it was like...
When I was here in the past, this was kind of like a transitionary phase of my life where I'm doing this and it's so fun and exciting and then I'm going to move on to something else and it's going to be fun and exciting and awesome.
And then two years later, my whole life has collapsed.
I'm in a house that I can't afford anymore.
My ex that I hate is pregnant with my kid and I have no money.
I've got no upward mobility.
I failed college. My job is horrible.
This is like All of those, the wave function had collapsed into one thing, and that one thing was the worst thing that it could have possibly been at the time for me.
Yeah, like everything was gone and horrible.
So yeah, that was the feeling I had at the time.
Do you ever contemplate suicide?
I thought about thinking about it, but I've just never been that kind of person, so.
I mean, basically, as a way to escape from the hardships.
Something that I'm so incredibly lucky, I don't know why or how, I'm just going to chalk it up to biology.
I've always had really high mental baseline.
Like depression and all of that.
There have been a few short stints I've dealt with it past 30 because I did a lot of drugs.
But other than that, my mental baseline is just so high.
And even in the carpet cleaning days, like if you, man, the videos might still be there.
I think on my old YouTube channel where I'll be like playing Starcraft when I first started getting into streaming.
And I'll be calling up customers like, this is Steve from Guaranteed Clean.
We had to move your job back one hour.
Is it okay if I show up instead of 2.30?
And then I hang up. It's like, all right, guys, we got three more games.
And it's like, let's go. Like, stuff like that.
So my baseline has always been, like, really high for mental function.
So even in the low point, you had strength.
Is there anything you can give by way of advice from people that, for whom the wave function collapses?
As it does for many of us.
Like, holy fuck.
The world is not full of opportunity.
And you're kind of a failure.
Like, I've I've been there.
Yeah, I don't know. It's rough because I usually ask for compassion from people that have it better off.
Because once you're down there, the only reason...
I say I got lucky, but it wasn't even really lucky.
Or it was lucky, but it was more lucky.
It wasn't just lucky that I got into streaming.
It was lucky that I was into computers at an early age.
It was lucky that I played video games at an early age.
It was lucky that all the tech came up at exactly that right point in time.
I was a pretty smart guy, but it was definitely a Preparation meets opportunity.
And that opportunity was like at the exact precise moment of my life.
If anything had gone differently, then I would just be cleaning carpets today.
So in the many worlds interpretation of quantum mechanics...
This is like one out of like...
There's many, many Stevens that are just still carpet cleaning.
And they're full of pain and resentment.
Yeah. The one piece of advice that I give, and I hate that I have to push back against all these crypto bros and everybody online, for decently intelligent people that are successful, I've never heard anybody give a contradiction to this.
Maybe you will. You can tell me if you disagree.
I always look at kids in high school and I'm like, just try a little bit harder.
Like, 30 minutes a night, if you don't study, just do 30 minutes, just do a little bit more.
Yeah. It is, you're laying the foundation for the rest of your life, and you can't appreciate it in high school and college.
But, oh my God, when you get out, everything in your life is so much easier.
You have probably more responsibility over the direction of your life when you're like 13, 14 years old than you ever will once you're like 25 and older.
Because this is like when you're determining the foundations that everything's going to be built on.
Yeah, 100%.
First of all, it does seem that The liberating aspect of being young is like anything you learn.
So working hard at learning something will pay off in nonlinear ways, like you said with video games.
I feel like people who are like, I hate school.
All right, well, fine.
But find something Where you're challenging yourself, you're growing, you're learning, you're learning a skill, you're learning about a thing.
Of course, you could push back and say, well, there's some trajectories that might not be productive, like if you spend the entirety of your teen years playing, I don't know, League of Legends, a game you have Love and hate relationship with...
No, just a hate and hate relationship. Okay, well, we'll talk about...
I think you have a love-hate relationship with hate in general and love.
We'll try to decomplexify that one.
I think in general, just investing yourself fully with passion really does pay off.
But that said, also school...
I feel like doesn't get enough credit, like high school in particular, middle school and high school, because it's general education.
I think, especially if you're lucky to have good teachers, but honestly, I haven't, mostly.
The textbooks themselves were good teachers.
It's a one chance in life you have to really explore a subject.
Fuck grades. Getting good grades...
It's at tension, I would say, with actual learning.
That is true. But just get a biology textbook and to explore ideas in biology and allowing yourself to be inspired by the beauty of it.
Yeah, I don't know, I think that really, really, really pays off and you never get a chance to do that again.
And maybe not even textbooks, like reading, straight up reading.
I think if you read, this is one time in life you get a chance to read, really read, like read a book a day read.
You can really invest You can really grow by reading.
I mean, Elon Musk, all those guys talk about it.
So the really influential reading is during those high school years because you're basically learning from others the mistakes they've made, the solutions to problems.
You're basically learning the shortcuts to life.
Whatever the hell you want to do.
Music, read from the best people, the music theory.
Learn music theory. Read biographies about jazz musicians, blues musicians.
See all the mistakes.
See what they did. See the shortcuts.
If you want to do podcasting, read about other podcasts.
If you want to do streaming, read about other streamers, physicists, and so on.
I feel like you figure out all the mistakes and you get to shortcut through life.
Because most people show up to college without having done that.
And now you get a chance to shortcut your way past them.
Yeah, 100%.
But nobody really teaches you that.
They're like, go to school, from this time to that time, shut up, this is just what you do, eat your broccoli.
I think there's two huge problems.
One is, now that I'm older, because you don't know anything as a kid.
You can't really criticize adults as a kid, because you're a kid.
By the way, you're ageist, if I may say so.
I am. I am super ageist.
As I get older, I get even more ageist.
There are a lot of people where I argue with them, like, man, dude, you're really 22, aren't you?
I can tell every word you say just seeps of, like, 22-year-oldness.
But that's okay. I love that for you.
Yeah. No, I could just say, because you mentioned this, your wife is a fellow streamer, Melina.
You mentioned that this is a source of fights for the two of you.
And I could just feel that.
There is truth to what you're saying, which is like, all right, you're saying that because you're 22.
Just wait until you're 25 and you won't be saying that anymore.
Now, that is the most annoying thing for people to hear.
Yeah, you can't ever say that, of course.
Because it's actually usually true.
Because we do go through phases in life, and you can understand that most things are phases.
So just in general, you can say, just wait.
Just wait. You won't feel this way again.
I could say that to you. You could say that to yourself.
Just wait. Whatever you're feeling like, just wait.
In five, ten years, you'll be a different person, and you will laugh at the things you take seriously now that they're causing you pain now.
All that kind of stuff. But people hate hearing that.
Absolutely. I think the joke that I always say is that like if I could literally step into a time machine and I could come back out and see myself as a 17-year-old and I could say, hey, I'm literally you from the future.
You see the time machine.
And I would look at me and I would see the time machine and I would give myself the best advice in the world to be the most successful person.
I would ignore all of it.
Even knowing it came for myself, I'd be like, this guy sold out.
This dude doesn't know what the fuck he's talking about.
Like, nah, I'll figure it out better.
Like, he must have made some mistakes. That's what I would think is the 17th.
Even if I knew it was myself in the future, I would just 100% never believe it.
And knowing that is very frustrating.
But I keep that in mind when I deal with younger people.
That's why, like, I never – I always say on stream when I'm talking to – like, there's been stuff with, like, Sneeko.
There's another girl on my stream called Lab.
Like, when I see the way – I see the mistakes they're making.
Oftentimes, because I've made all of these mistakes, sometimes in the most public and horrible fashion ever.
But I'm never, like, a mentor.
I'm not going to sit there and, like, tell you, like, oh, do this or that or that or that because, like – I don't know if you're going to listen to me, and I don't want to condescend to you.
And, you know, you figure stuff out, and I'll be here if you want to talk about it.
But, yeah. There was one of those stories.
There was a company that didn't work with me because I was very adamant on defending, like, very radical notions about language and racial slurs and everything when I was, like, 22 or whatever.
And there's a company and they said, well, we don't want to work with this guy for an event.
And after they'd said that, I'd written an article on my website called The Company Was Gigabyte.
They make motherboards. I said, fuck Gigabyte in the ass.
That was the title to my article.
And it was like, well, if they don't want to work with me, I'm going to blow them up and never do anything ever with them again.
And it was just like, like looking back at it now, obviously, as an older person, like, hey, you need to pump the brakes and chill.
You're destroying yourself. But yeah, as a young person, it's like, yeah, you're 22.
Of course you think that you can say whatever and do whatever.
And as long as you're good at what you're doing, you've got the whole world behind you.
And yeah, geez. Well, let's go there.
You have a history of using offensive language, like the R word, the N word, including the N word with a hard R, calling women bitches, talking about rape in a nonchalant way.
What part of that do you regret?
And what part of that do you not?
Language is very complicated.
When it comes to stuff relating to slurs, there's been like a whole trajectory of feelings on everything related to language.
For you personally and for the internet as a whole?
Yeah, I don't care about the internet. Almost for me personally.
In my early 20s, I'll say like 20 to 23, I think probably when I first started streaming, my feeling is that any word is just a word, and if it hurts you, that's your fault.
Take responsibility for yourself.
This probably came from my background of being like a really independent person, so that's just kind of like the mind that I had for everything.
Basically, they were like a collection of experiences that I had that as I grew, I started to realize like, okay, well, I feel differently about some of these words depending on the context, and I can see how they can affect other people depending on the context.
So as I've kind of like grown, I think I've developed a more sophisticated understanding of how different words are used and how they affect people, whether they like it or not, and more importantly, whether I like it or not, and that words can, even if I don't want it to be, they can be a vehicle for emboldening certain types of ideas that I don't want to embolden.
And yeah, that's kind of been the whole like growth.
I've been lucky that in the time that I came up on the internet, I was able to learn these lessons because if I was trying to learn those same lessons today, I would have been completely destroyed because I had insane views on language like 10 years ago.
We could talk about the past or we could talk about the present.
Let's talk about the past first. So how do you deal with the fact that there's videos of you in the past saying the N word, including the N word with a hard R? And what's the context?
Can you give me a memory?
What would be the context usually?
When I lay out this defense, it's not because I wouldn't have used the N-word.
Generally, whenever I said the N-word, it was usually in an example of like, this is something that a racist person would say.
Mm-hmm. I don't think I've ever, on the internet, I don't think I've ever called anybody the N-word with a hard R. Not because I wouldn't have, but just because it wasn't in my vocabulary.
I played RTS, real-time strategy, and we used the F-slur for gay people.
That's the one. And I use that one a ton.
I've called people that a ton in the past.
So I should actually, just as a small tangent...
Yeah, go for it. And this is what I'd like to explore with you.
There's a ruthlessness to the language in the gaming world.
And there's different communities.
They have different flavors of language.
Of hate speech, yeah. Of hate speech, essentially.
And there's also a humor to it, which...
It really bothers me in a dark way that I haven't been able to really think through because humor seems to be a kind of catalyst for hate.
It seems to normalize hate.
Basically, it's like Louis C.K. says a lot of edgy things, but you take something Louis C.K. says and do it in a non-funny way and do it over and over and over and keep Increasing the hatefulness of it, the vitriol, and somehow you find yourself like Alice in Wonderland in a world full of hate, where there's no good and evil, it's all the same.
In fact, the good is to be mocked, and the evil is to be celebrated for the humor of it.
Basically not taking the ideas of evil seriously.
It reveals something about human nature that you can let go.
The moral of relativism that can happen when you do that kind of stuff.
At the same time, I'm a fan of dark humor when done well.
Anyway, for people who are not familiar, I just wanted to mention that some of the worst...
ends in LOL happens in gaming communities.
Yeah, the, um.
And that's where you come from in a certain part.
So a lot of people don't remember this or don't know this because they're younger,
but way back in the day, in the late 90s, early, mid 2000s of the internet,
the way that online kind of like shit talk worked was you were just trying to ramp up
to the most insanely edgy, crazy stuff you could say to like provoke a reaction.
Have you ever heard of something called the aristocrats?
That it's like a joke, the joke.
Oh yeah, the joke, yeah, there's a movie on it, yeah.
Okay, basically every single like shit talk back in the internet was like that.
Like, what is the most increasingly depraved...
And back then, you didn't get banned for slurs or anything on any of these chat rooms.
So it was just, like, insane world to walk into.
And I was fully 100% a part of, a product of, and a contributor to...
So that probably still goes on on the internet in some way, and that probably still goes on the internet in a maybe more pacified way.
Only in darker parts of the internet.
I'd say for the most part, most, well, compared to back then, compared to 20 years ago, the internet is way cleaned up now.
There are still going to be boards you can go on or parts of the internet where you see that type of humor, but...
Back then, you could open your mic on Xbox Live and hear some insane stuff when that first started.
Nowhere near what you'd hear today.
There's still elements of escalation that happen.
That just seems to be part of human nature on the internet.
Because we don't get the feedback of actually hurting people directly.
So the trolling...
For the lulls, you will still escalate within the bounds.
You're just saying that there's more bounds now.
On Reddit, there's more bounds and so on.
There's moderators that yell at you, that ban you and so on if you cross those bounds.
But overall, that basic human instinct to escalate...
Especially under the veil of anonymity is still there.
I don't know. It's dark. It's dark.
Yeah, there's a lot of different ways to look at it, and there's different ways you can break that out.
For instance, you mentioned dark humor, and you say that sometimes dark humor is funny, and sometimes it's not.
I think that it's really important to dig into and figure out why certain things are funny.
Can I give you an example? Yeah, go.
It's from your subreddit.
Oh, boy. No, that made me laugh, and I felt wrong about it.
Oh, no. So this is...
I already know what this is, yeah.
Yeah. So this is a trolley problem.
To me, it connects because I think about the – it keeps – because I worked on autonomous vehicles, the trolley problem, the philosophical thought experiment, keeps brought up a lot.
You know, when AI is part of making the decision, do I kill three people here or five people here?
And AI makes that decision, how do you do that calculus?
And this particular – there's a – There's a deep, so it's satire that reveals some kind of flaw in society.
I feel like that's what- That's what dark humor does?
Successful dark humor does.
And I don't know if this- There's a flaw. Hmm.
I feel like there's a certain brand of dark humor, and I think the reason is why it's good, or why it is good humor.
I don't think it necessarily reveals a flaw.
Sometimes I feel like it reveals a kind of virtue, I think.
If you look at this particular thing...
Can I explain what we're just listening?
The title of the Reddit post is You Know What to Pick.
And it says, five people are going to die either way, but if you flip the lever, the trolley will do a sick fucking loop first.
And also the top comment is a question saying, which I think is also part of the dark humor that's successful.
Can I get the gender and ethnic backgrounds of the groups first?
And the top answer is, both groups are each comprised of five white, orphaned, cis male...
Heavy meth users who are consistently in and out of drug rehab, all who identify as right-wing extremists.
Humor is such a sophisticated thing that we engage in.
Humor is really complicated.
But I would argue that hopefully the humor here shows the virtue of this is obviously horrible, but that's kind of why it's funny.
It's funny because it's such a horrible question to ask.
Do we kill five people in a boring way or in a really entertaining way?
And it's like, that's really And then when you ask even more, like, what are the ethnic backgrounds?
Like, that's even worse to say that, you know?
So I feel like that's like the type of, there's a way that you can engage with dark humor where it's like, oof, like, it's funny because it's so wrong and so taboo.
And we all know that it's wrong and taboo, and that's kind of where the shared laugh comes from.
So for me, the question, asking the diversity question is a sophisticated way of revealing the absurdity of asking about diversity when it's talking about human life.
Oh, interesting, because the way that I took that was, I think it reveals the absurdity of how people will weigh different ethnic backgrounds so differently when it comes to value of human life.
Like, I'm actually thinking of that in terms of, like, an immigration-related question, where people are really keen and quick to dehumanize, like, black or brown people.
So, like, the question is, like, well, if five of them are brown and five are white, well, I know which one I'm going to, you know, pull the lever for.
That's how I read that. But it's satirizing that aspect.
Yeah, exactly. Yes, of course, yeah.
But that's what I mean, that that's the flaw.
To me, at least, it showed that humanity or social networks that are easy to be outraged and love the outrage and the chaos Twitter and social networks will pull that lever.
They would always try to maximize the fun.
And there's a sick aspect to all the atrocities, all the tragedies that happen in the world that we kind of always lean towards the outrageous narrative weaved around it.
The one that leads to the most clicks, to the most Attention, to the most outrage, to all that kind of stuff.
So that's almost like a satire of society when they are faced with tragedy.
I'm trying to think of a word that's not fun.
Entertainment. Maximize the entertainment, yeah.
This is a big criticism I give, especially to conservative crowds.
You know, left-leaning people, everybody doesn't.
I don't like when people blame the media for the state of the media today.
I very much believe that everything in society is a feedback loop, and that if you're really unhappy with the state of the media, I think that the media is a good reflection for what people want to see.
Because there is a room right now in the United States where somebody could start a company where all they do is completely factual reporting, they don't have a political slant, and they're not giving you these sensationalist narratives or stories, and that media company would fail in two weeks because people don't want to see that.
Generally, people really want to see the show me the guy that really believes in what I say, that calls the other guy an idiot, the guy that is screaming on TV or on the radio, like, this is what I really want.
And people will engage in that, and that feedback loop will continue for generations.
And then all of a sudden people are like, why is the media so biased?
Why is the media driving so many narratives?
And it's like, well, what do you mean? This is exactly what you want to see.
And that's frustrating for me.
That's one of my big kind of when I defend establishments or when I talk about like… The interplay between citizen and all these institutions we have, that the institutions are very much a reflection of the population, at least in democratic societies.
And I think that people very much try to elude the personal responsibility or the country's responsibility to why some of them look the way that they do.
But that takes us back to the N-word with a hard R. Sure.
Why? For the particular examples that I was giving, or for the particular conversations that I was having, if you're going to have challenging conversations around certain words, I think you should probably be able to say them, otherwise it feels really ridiculous to me.
Do you still believe that?
Yes. Not like calling people those words, but in having conversations about those words, I would say that I still believe that, yeah.
But don't you think, as you said, that using those words I think depending on the context of what's going on, I think that that's going to be a big driver in terms of how people are going to perceive or take it.
So in a conversation about the N-word, I don't think I would normally say the N-word, we would just talk about Much the same way that like in a movie, like in Django, people use the N-word.
Should that be censored in that movie?
Or in the context of that movie, is it being employed in a way where these aren't good people, you're not supposed to like them, and that's what the audience walks away with?
Yeah, but that context is different than conversation.
It feels like in conversation, you using that word normalizes it.
And normalizing that word is going to make it easier for people who use that word in a hateful way to use it.
Same with the F word, the F slur.
If you use that casually and normalize it in a way that's not hateful, you use it in a way that's not hateful, but the side effect is that it normalizes it, then people who do use it in a hateful way will be more likely to use it.
Therefore, mathematically looking at the equation of the number of times the N-word or the F-word is used throughout the world, it increases the number of times it's used in a hateful way.
And you're part of that problem, Stephen.
I don't agree. I understand the thought process, but I don't know if using certain words within different contexts is going to necessarily normalize the hateful use of that word.
That is an argument that I've heard people use.
Somebody will say like, okay, well, hold on.
That should never be used ever because by virtue of you normalizing it, even in an inoffensive environment, you increase the proclivity for people to use it in a potentially more offensive environment.
And my argument is always that like, no, I don't think that crossover exists.
But if you did want to take that argument, and maybe you do feel this way, I think that you get really problematic when you run into communities that do use certain words that people would say, well, they should be allowed to do it.
So, for instance, if you think that any utterance of the N-word at all is highly problematic and might increase hatred...
And like the entire rap industry has to dramatically change the way that they engage with the N-word.
And obviously a lot of people that criticize people's use of the N-word aren't going to turn to rappers and say, well, you guys can't say it either.
No, it's who, I mean, it's who uses the N-word.
That's what, it's not, so it's not just the word, it's the, it is context dependent.
But I would say that you as a white person having conversations with The context there is the kind that would lead to any increase in hate.
Do you think the N-word should be censored in the dictionary?
No. And I believe there's a Wikipedia page on it and it's not censored.
Yeah, I think it should be in the dictionary.
I think the context of casual conversation...
Like I said, I just believe that on the internet, having humor, having fun conversations as you have on your streams, that leads to the normalization of the word without any educational value.
Yeah, I would agree with that. I think I would agree with that.
Sorry, so there's a difference between F-slur and N-word in both, I think.
I'll tell you something that bothers me about your streams and basically every other stream is the casual use of the R word.
Oh, the ableism, yeah.
I don't know if it's about the able.
I don't even know. Listen, it's complicated.
I'm not like virtue signaling here.
No, ableism isn't virtue signaling.
I mean, it's a legitimate, yeah.
Like I get emails from fans that say like, hey, like I deal with this particular issue.
Every time you use this word, it kind of feels like you're attacking me.
Like just like, so it's not, it's a valid concept.
Yeah. It's just something cuts wrong for me.
Like, for example, I'm not bothered by...
I am bothered by the excessive use of the word fuck, but not moderate use of the word fuck.
What is it? I'm curious, then, when somebody calls somebody an R-word, what is the feeling that you get that makes you feel bad about it?
It signals to me that you don't give a damn about...
People who are struggling in ways that you are not struggling.
Like, that signals to me.
Like, about the experience of others.
Do you think that there are other words also that could convey, like, a similar feeling to you?
Because it feels like you've drawn a pretty special circle around...
Because, like, I imagine, like, oh, this guy's...
You're an uneducated dumbfuck, or you're a nitwick, or, like...
Well, that circle keeps changing.
Which it can, which is fine.
I think that's the whole point with the culture.
So I'm trying to feel, my feeling is a kind of, you know, I'm a human being that exists in a social context that we're all evolving that language together and just feels wrong.
The word bitch, for example, I've heard on your streams and in general, calling a woman a stupid bitch really bothers me.
But it's not just the word bitch, it's context.
For example, me personally, I'm speaking to me personally, like badass bitch.
Is different than stupid bitch.
Sure, like a bad bitch or something is different than, yeah, of course.
Way different. Sure. I think it speaks to a bigger sense of civility and respect for human beings that are not like you.
That's the feeling that I'm bothering.
So, I guess what I'm trying to say here is...
Just because people speak in this kind of way in the gaming world and streams doesn't mean that you, like a lot of people look up to you.
It doesn't mean young people especially.
It doesn't mean that you don't have the responsibility to sort of stand alone from the crowd.
Because you're somebody that values the power of effective discourse.
Mm-hmm. And...
To be effective discourse, there's some level of civility.
So you can be the beacon of civility in that world versus giving in to the derogatory words.
Because you have to...
You have to lift people out of that world, out of the muck of what I would say is like drama and ineffective discourse.
I think that's one of your missions, right?
Is to inspire the world through conversation, through debate, through effective discourse.
Yeah. So I guess I'm just calling you out that I think using our word, for me personally, as a fan that believes in your mission, it just makes you look ineffective and bad and uninspiring to young people that look up to you.
Because those young people are going to use those words that you're using, and they'll do it much less effectively.
That's the problem.
Yeah, I guess the challenge is always just, like, finding the line.
Like, my vocabulary shifted dramatically from, even from, like, two or three years ago, I think my vocabulary shifted quite a bit as we've, like, we've kind of gotten rid of some words and some things have kind of commented out.
The R word is one that has kind of gone out and come back and gone out and come back.
That one we've definitely gone back and forth on.
I know there are different thoughts about it in different communities on the internet.
This is interesting. I mean, I'm just telling you, for me, it cuts, and I'm not a social justice warrior type, it cuts pretty hard.
What you're saying is I'm going to lose a subscriber if I'm...
No, it's not a subscriber.
I actually have to empathize harder because I'm like, maybe this is not a very good person.
That's what I feel. If you're so carelessly using that word, then maybe you're not actually thinking deeply about the suffering in the world.
To be a student of human nature, you really have to think about other humans and other experiences that are unlike your own.
Yeah, of course. And so that's the sense I get.
But at the same time, you're also like the grandpa I mean, ageist, who's trying to be cool with the young kids.
A lot of the reason young kids look up to you is like you also know the language of the internet.
Yeah, but I mean, that's not an excuse to use words that we think shouldn't be used.
I guess the question that I would have, because it's always a struggle, and to some extent it's kind of happened, is let's say that like three years ago, I would have said I'm no longer saying the artwork.
I'm just going to get rid of that in my vocabulary.
Like, is there a chance that today we would be having a conversation about like, why do you call people dumb fucks?
Like, is that really appropriate? Like, does this attack at the core of, like, somebody's, like, level of intelligence, education, opportunities in life, like, is that worthy?
You don't think so? I think that's a, as the kids say, cope.
You really think so? I think that's a cope.
Because the words have definitely moved in a way where it's like, this was okay, now it's not, this is okay, now it's not.
So you're standing your ground by using, listen, you could, you could, you could.
But I think it's better to use those words, if you want to defend the ground, words stand on, to use them rarely and deliberately versus how you currently use them, which is to express an emotion.
I'm going to be honest, you use our word not when you're at your best.
True. And so that's not...
That's generally, that can be true for a lot of swearing too, but yeah, I know what you mean.
No, but you know that our word is offensive.
And part of it is you tell yourself that you're still kind of fighting political correctness by using it a little bit when you say it.
I don't think so.
Like, if you ever hear me say, like, fucking moron in a debate, it's like it's done.
Like, this conversation is over.
There's no way that anything productive is happening past that point.
I think fucking moron is not—I think it's ineffective, it's not civil, but it's not—it doesn't bother me in the way— It's basically when you speak in a way that I know there's a group that's going to be hurt by that, not only do I think about the hurt that group experiences, I think of you as a lesser intellectual, like as a lesser person who's thinking about the world.
What bothers me the most is just what kind of mindset that inspires young people, especially when you're a public figure and a lot of people look up to you.
So I definitely don't think sort of this idea, the R word is not the battleground of expanding the Overton window of discourse.
I don't think it'll lead to dumb fuck being cancelled two years later.
Unless that word is hurting people's experience, which I don't foresee that happening.
I think legitimately...
R word and F slur and calling women bitches.
Context matters here too, of course.
But just the way I've heard you use it, it's from emotion, and it's from frustration, and it ultimately is rooted in disrespect.
I think it's ineffective.
And of course, who gets to say, I don't know.
But I'm saying, I admire effective conversations.
And I admire great humor, dark humor, wit.
To me, oftentimes, the use of the R word in the way you've used it and the way you see the community use it is none of those things.
It contributes not at all to the humor and so on.
Now, I could see it might contribute to the...
To the camaraderie of that particular group, especially when they normalize the use of that word.
You kind of take some of the edge off, but you forget that there's a...
A large number of other people that don't have the chemistry, that don't hear the music of the friendship that you have, the relationship you have, and instead they hear the normalization of a hateful word.
And it ultimately has an impact that's hateful.
And then people like me who show up, you know, I haven't watched much of your stuff.
It turns me off. A couple of times your content came before me, and I listened to it a little bit.
It turned me off completely. I didn't understand how good your heart is.
I didn't understand how your mission of actually...
De-radicalize people, help people, and increase the level of good faith discourse in the world.
I didn't understand any of that, because what I was hearing is pretty rough, like the R-word type of stuff.
And I just feel like the benefit-cost analysis is heavy on the cost.
Gotcha. So I just have to sort of call this out.
Okay. And I straight up think it's wrong.
Why do you think it's wrong?
Because it's hurting people without any benefit to you whatsoever.
When you say hurting people, do you mean the person I'm using it at?
Or do you think there's like the... No, no, no.
The third group.
It's good feedback, right? I always consider everything...
I respect you a lot. You're a really smart guy.
Something that I always kind of like...
Fight over in terms of language or who to attack or what to attack or what to do is that it's very hard to draw what boxes are okay to insult people on versus what aren't.
So, for instance, if I call somebody a Nazi with a lot of vitriol, I am okay with every single Nazi being negatively affected by that because that category intrinsically calls upon it some level of moral condemnation for me, right?
Whereas, like, if I'm out there, I try not to do, like, image-related jokes, right?
I don't want to call you, like, oh, you're a fat fucking loser because there's a lot of people that are fat that are overweight where I don't want them to feel bad.
I don't want them—I'm not trying to call you out or, like, insult you.
So there's, like, a lot of—you say cost-benefit.
I look at, like, a lot of collateral damage from a word like that where there's no purpose in doing that.
So certain words are easy to get rid of.
They're off the table, right? F-slur, N-word.
These are not words you call people because there's so much collateral.
It's not worth it. We've got some words where it's like, if you have some form of mental thing, it is a bad thing.
You're not a bad person, but just using that word could feel like a collateral damage to those people.
And then there's other categories of words.
So if I say that this person is a stupid fucking Republican, right?
There's probably some Republicans that...
Aren't dumb. That I don't want to feel called out by that.
Like, are those types of phrases that you think should be completely removed as well?
Or, I'm kind of curious. So, this completely removed, just so we're clear.
Yeah. I'm not referring to censorship.
Oh, no, I'm not even talking about it. I'm just a person, like, emotionally.
Removed is the wrong word, though.
Like, I care about, like, I'm not trying to listen to people on the internet saying, like, you shouldn't say that word.
That's not good. I mean...
I'm trying to look to your mind and heart.
The reason we're talking today is you're betraying your gift.
You're better than this.
You think it's indicative of like a more flippant thought process where it's like the only way you can say that word is if you're ignoring the hurt and suffering of those people.
Not even those people.
You're ignoring the state of language.
Because I think you're getting to the point, because it's not about a single word.
It's about like, it's music.
And I just feel like there's off notes.
Very strong note. It's a strong note that ruins the melody.
Gotcha. And I don't think I can say you shouldn't use the R word or whatever.
I'm just listening to music and reviewing the final result.
It's not necessarily...
Because maybe one use of the R word strategically or part of an actual...
When you've built up a camaraderie that's sandwiched in some love, but then you try to reveal their...
Because you're talking about a bunch of drama.
You have friends with whom you're worrying and stuff, and they're all a little bit beautifully insane.
And you've said that you are becoming more and more insane.
It's beautiful to watch. It's the human condition laid before us.
Wonderful. And some of that is swearing and so on.
So it's a tricky thing.
But... The whole skill of discourse, just like it is with dark humor, is walking that line.
I just feel like it's overuse of the R word.
And I don't want to die in that ground, because I don't think it's that representative.
Like, there's certain things like that, it feels like it ruins the music.
And I don't, you know, saying like a dumb Republican or a dumb Democrat, I don't...
Yeah, that ruins it too a little bit.
Depends on how you use it.
You can be lazy with that.
You know, like even overuse of the word, I think, bots is what's used for people who don't think or something.
I don't actually know the definition.
I'm offended on behalf of robots.
That might be a compliment soon.
Yeah. Right, exactly.
I guess bot means you don't think.
Yeah, you're like an NPC. Again, I'm a fan on behalf of NPCs.
I count myself as one. But there's a sense if you say bots too much that you're just dismissing people.
Like... Everything I say is right, and anyone that disagrees with me is a bot.
That's lazy too.
Sometimes it's funny, sometimes it's effective.
Basically saying a lot of people in the mainstream media or something like that are bots.
Okay, a little bit of that is effective.
But too much, it becomes ineffective.
And I'm trying to speak to that.
The reason we're highlighting clear examples, like the N-word, Joe Rogan had to contend with that.
I think it's ineffective.
It makes you less effective at discourse.
But like you've talked about many times, language is a tricky one.
It's always hard because you talk about constructing a melody.
There's not one melody that sounds good to everyone.
But there are probably certain notes that if you got rid of them, everybody's still going to like it about as much and you don't really lose anything.
There's a whole other part of an audience that might be more willing to listen.
Yeah, of course. And it's not about losing the magic of that melody.
You don't want to be vanilla.
I just feel like there's stuff that doesn't need to be there.
Yeah, for sure. It's fat.
But then again, the other thing that people should understand that might be listening to this, you're streaming many hours a day for many years.
I don't know. 11 or 12, I think, yeah.
It started in 2010. Yeah. And so one of the things that people can do is just clip out anything.
You're going through the full human experience of emotion.
Anger, fear, frustration, all of it.
So of course there's going to be moments when you're not the best version of yourself.
Anything else to say about the language?
It's complicated. I'm still always trying to figure it out.
There are opinions that I have that have changed throughout the years.
It's possible that the R word has always been the next one on the chopping block that we're all kind of looking at, but people are always worried about that treadmill.
But it's possible in a year or two I'll have a different view on it or I'll have changed away some of the words I use.
It's always like a work in progress.
There's always different communities that feel different ways about different words.
Yeah, but do you acknowledge that there's people out there that are never going to talk to you?
They're never gonna think of you as a good man because you used the N-word with a hard R publicly.
In the past? I mean, yeah, those people exist, but, I mean, there are some people that are beyond my reach, which I'm okay with.
There's going to be some people because of things that have been involved or even ideas that I have now that might make them beyond my reach.
Something you said earlier is very true.
I think the goal is to identify what are the elements that you can cut out that aren't integral to your message but could be alienating to more people.
And those are probably the things that you identify.
But I think that you can get lost in yourself or lost in the internet or lost in the outside of yourself if you're trying to appeal to every single person.
That's just never going to be the case.
And for, I actually, I like that I've had the journey that I've had on the internet that you can find me saying and defending a lot of insane stuff 10 years ago, because I think it shows like a level of progress.
And I think I do get a lot of respect and buy-in to certain communities where it's like, I'm not just some random dude telling you that like, oh, you shouldn't say, you know, the F word or the N word.
Like I'm a guy that's been there, that's done it, that's defended it.
And you can see my whole past, my whole history is laid bare for you to watch every, you know, thousands of hours of it.
But I can show that like there's growth and evolution and change that can happen in a person.
Yeah, and you're honest about that growth.
It's a tricky thing, because people just bring up stuff from your past.
For sure. I hope we figure out, as a civilization, a mechanism to clearly say, this was me two years ago.
This was me five years ago.
I'm a different person.
And like... Because Twitter doesn't care about that.
These social mechanisms that bring stuff up doesn't care about that.
It's like one stupid thing you say, it becomes like a scarlet letter.
And I don't know how to fight that.
It's tricky to fight that. Have you ever seen Men in Black?
Yes. When K and J are on the bench and he says, a person is smart, but people are stupid, dumb, finicky animals or whatever, there's something that changes for human dynamics when there is a group of people that make it so hard to control.
Like, I think one-on-one, anybody can sit across from somebody and admit to some horrible stuff.
I used to be, you know, I abused my husband when I was, you know, 20 and now I'm 35 and I see what's wrong, or I did this, I was addicted to whatever, and, you know, I made these mistakes.
One-on-one, it's always easy. But in group environments, that in-group, out-group, tribalistic thing of identifying one thing and then coming to destroy a person's life is such a huge impulse we have.
And I think probably when we were hunter-gatherers in the forest, it's probably good because you really want to push weird people out or anything like that.
But now on the internet, when we can hunt for any dissenting opinion and just with ruthless precision destroy somebody's life over it, it's a pretty scary dynamic.
I think one of the mechanisms that could fix it is make it super easy for each individual person to analyze all the stupid shit they themselves have said in the past.
Like a full recording.
Because I think people just honestly paint a very rosy picture to their own brain of who they have been in the past.
Yeah, of course. If we can have empathy for the fact that we've said stupid shit, or we're drunk, the ridiculous things you say, the offensive things you might have said, the offensive things you might have done, I just feel like that would give us the ammunition to have empathy for others that are like, okay, yeah, this guy five years ago said this.
Maybe that doesn't represent who they are any more than stuff I said five years ago represents who I am today.
Yeah. I feel like technology can actually enable that.
Maybe, although you're talking about more recording and more stuff, which people are already wary of.
It's a double-edged sword.
I think there is going to be more and more recording.
We have to figure out how to do that in a way that respects people's privacy and gives them ownership of their data and so on.
I've looked at the search history I've done on Google, which for most people is available, like your Google search history.
And it's fascinating to watch the evolution of a human being.
Like, it doesn't seem like the same person.
It's like a different person.
For sure. It's weird.
It's also hard, too, with the internet today.
I'm gonna be ageist again.
But, like, now all of the people are thrown together, you know?
Whereas, like, I don't want a 27-year-old judging the language of, like, a 15 or 16-year-old.
Like, obviously, he's in high school.
Like, there was that story that came out of the, there was a kid that saved a recording of I think it was like some white girl.
I think that she like got her driver's license and she was like, I can drive now, N-words, with the A or whatever.
It was dumb, she shouldn't have said it. But I think she was like 15 or 16 when she TikTok'd this or whatever.
And he held on to that recording until she applied and got accepted to college three years later.
And then he released it to get her kicked out of college.
And I'm like, damn. If everything that I had ever said as a 15, 16-year-old was immortalized on the internet, my life wouldn't have even begun.
Those are insanely high standards to hold people to.
Obviously, you shouldn't be saying certain words or whatever, but you have to be able to make mistakes in adolescence.
Everybody does. We all did.
Everybody did it growing up.
Why do you think there is so much misogyny in the streaming community?
And how can you fight it?
Because you've shown a lot of interest in fighting it, trying to decrease or eliminate misogyny from your community.
I think it's really difficult.
I think that eliminating racism is easier than eliminating misogyny.
On the internet, you mean? On anywhere.
Because I think fundamentally, I don't think there's that much difference between, like, white people and black people and brown people and Asian people or whatever.
You know, we have different cultures and stuff, but at the end of the day, we're all people.
But I think there are differences between men and women, like, throughout all of history and time and then even today in every culture.
And when real differences do exist, it's harder to account for them in a way that can we have conversations with each other without it becoming very gendered in a negative way, right?
Negative way of gendering something, like a misogynistic way of doing it.
Of course, it's unclear to me that it's so difficult to avoid the negative gendering versus the positive, because there's a lot of positive to the tension, the dance between the different genders and so on.
Maybe in this particular moment in history, it's not.
But it's not trivial to me that racism is easier to eliminate.
It's an interesting hypothesis, just because there's more biological difference between men and women.
That means it's harder to eliminate, but...
I don't know if this is true. I hear this a lot. I feel like I read this somewhere, but I need to get a better
source before I repeat it everywhere.
But I've heard that like in the US military, for instance, they've done exceedingly well.
They do an exceedingly good job at getting different people of different races to integrate.
And it's like not a huge problem once you're through basic training, all the training, everything.
But for different sexes, it still represents a significant problem that the military hasn't figured out.
And I actually looked at, like, well, what's the military doing?
Because if, you know, if something was solvable, like, can we sleep for four hours a night and be healthy?
If we could, I bet the military would know, you know?
So I kind of look sometimes to them to see their integration, but it might be that there are other issues there that make it...
Yeah, it feels like the military is a very particular kind of...
For sure, yeah, it could be, yeah....the actual task at hand might bias the difficulty of the process.
Potentially, yeah. There's been a lot of interesting talk about, like...
Women integrating into male groups and how do you do this in a way where everybody is happy with the outcome and there's not like issues?
I think Jordan Peterson spoke about this a little bit, and then Workplace Culture speaks about this a bit.
Would you happen to remember, I want to say it was like five or ten years ago, there was a big tech conference, and there were two guys behind a woman, and they made a joke about like a USB dongle, like dongle was a dick.
And this woman turned around, she tweeted pictures of them, spoke about like misogyny, and then that blew up into a huge ordeal that like, yeah.
There's this interesting phenomenon that in a...
Less misogynistic and more inclusive workplace environment.
Some women might end up feeling worse because in a more misogynistic environment, you're thinking like, okay, that's a woman.
She doesn't get our humor. I'm going to treat her in a very indifferent, you know, very dispassionate, cold way and whatever.
And then I'm going to have my boys over here.
And then you've got like these environments where they're a little bit more warmer and it's like, oh, cool.
We're going to bring this woman into our environment and we're going to make all the same types of like crash jokes we did before.
And it's actually worse now.
Now the woman feels even more otherwise because like, oh my God, why do you talk like this?
I think that internet communities, especially online ones that do political debate and video games, are very much like big boys clubs.
So it's not enough to just say, you can't be misogynistic to get rid of misogyny.
There's always going to be an othering effect on women.
There's a lot of behaviors that are unintuitive that you have to account for, and you've got to try to push that back.
And that's just a very, very, very challenging thing to do.
So I like to deal with concrete examples more.
So here's a concrete example. And this is like a recent initiative in my community because I'm trying to like be – because misogyny hasn't been fixed anywhere on the internet.
I'm curious. Well, there are ways that I can push my community to do this.
I don't think you should almost ever make a comment on a woman's appearance ever if they're appearing in like some political or professional manner.
Even if it's a positive comment, I think it's equally bad to a negative comment.
It's just never good to do.
And that's kind of an unintuitive thing, because it's like, well, a woman appears, wow, she's really cute.
It seems like a nice comment. You're being nice, you know, she looks cute or whatever.
But it's like, it's not at all the point of why she's there.
And just by saying that, you're kind of, like, otherizing her as, like, a person to, like, think she looks good, rather than listening to anything she has to say, you know?
Well, there's a lot of stuff that you're saying that is a part of massaging.
It's almost like... Any woman will tell you that.
Woman will, yeah, but they're not in these spaces and a lot of the guys don't know.
I think what that requires is just empathy.
You need to consider the female experience.
That's it. You have to either read about or talk with women.
The low-hanging fruit is very easy to learn.
It feels like just the level of social skill Oftentimes, in internet communities, it's quite low.
I disagree. I don't like to say...
Here's the problem with empathy is it's very hard to have empathy for experiences that are so outside of your own.
Well, maybe some people.
There might be some people that can do it. I can't.
There's a lot of stuff that I had to learn.
Women are half the population.
But they're women. They're totally different.
They're totally different.
We'll talk about...
They're not totally different.
So here's an example, okay? So, especially for me, my archetype makes up a lot of the internet.
White man. There's never been a point...
The name of a beautiful woman.
Who might be a dancer. What's the backstory?
From New Orleans or from...
I haven't thought that through yet. It's ambiguous, okay?
Like an open world.
An open world. I want you to project wherever you want Destiny the Dancer to be from.
That's in your mind, okay? All right.
I'll save that for later tonight.
Yeah. Okay. As a white guy, I don't know if there's ever been a spot that I've been in where I've been made to feel like I don't belong there just by virtue of who I am.
I actually don't. It's impossible for me to empathize that because I don't even have that experience.
If you go back eight, nine years, one of the big issues that came up was harassment in gaming against women.
And I was one of the big debaters against that, saying that like, sure, women might get harassment, but everybody gets harassment.
If you're a woman and you're in gaming and you get harassed, congratulations, you're being treated like a man.
What you're actually asking for is for us to actually treat you differently.
You don't want to be insulted. You don't want to be treated like a man.
And that's actually misogyny, is women making that argument.
Do you still stand by that? Is that a problem if I do?
No, I'm just kidding. Okay, almost.
Hold on. So a little while after.
I disagree with it.
Sure, okay. That's good. You should.
A little while later, I had a friend, Jessica.
Super cool girl. We go to play games.
She's between jobs. She's like, I've got like two months and we're going to grind CSGO. And I'm like, okay, this is awesome.
Let's do it. CSGO, Counter-Strike, Global Offensive, shooter game, FPS, microphones.
First day we start playing, okay?
Hop into our first game. Obviously she talks.
Everybody's making, is that a 12-year-old boy?
Why aren't you making sandwiches? Blah, blah, blah.
Yeah, okay, whatever. Play our first game.
Play our second game. Same jokes.
Third game, fourth game. By like the fourth or fifth game, I was actually starting to feel triggered.
Like every time the game started, I was like, can you just like talk so we can get over like the stupid fucking jokes?
It's so fucking stupid.
And you hear the same fucking joke every single time.
And it took one day of that experience for me to realize it's not about being insulted.
It's like this othering feeling that you don't belong.
And I've never felt that because I'm a white guy.
Not to be like virtue signaling, but there's no places where it's like, you're white, you don't belong here.
You're a guy, you don't belong here.
I've never felt that non-inclusion.
And playing with her...
There's a different feeling when it's the same types of jokes coming from a group of people to make you feel like you don't belong there, where I was like, damn, this actually feels really bad.
And it feels bad in a different way, where it's like, if you call me like an F slur or any other type of swear word or insult, like, yeah, you can call me that.
But at the end of the day, like, we're all kind of the same.
We're all white dudes and we call each other names.
But like, this is a woman and this is not her place and she doesn't belong here.
Kind of the analogy that I would make, because after getting these experiences, I would learn this afterwards.
If I tell you that there's another guy in a room, and you need to think of the worst insults ever for that person, without ever knowing anything about them or meeting them, if I tell you that it's like a white, straight guy, and you have to write insults, you're fucked.
Maybe you can do like school shooter, but there's not really much you can say at the end of the day.
But if I tell you it's a woman, whew, there are so many different jokes you can write.
If it's a black person, so many different racist things we can say.
Are you sure? I can come up with a lot of stuff for a white guy.
In terms of stuff that is just intrinsic to him being a white guy?
Yeah, like there's...
Really? Wait a minute.
What are you talking about? There's a lot.
The internet has sharpened that sword.
In terms of like jokes that are targeted at his sex.
Incel, virgin, weak.
Some of the incel, virgin, maybe.
Yeah, that's getting there, sure. That's for sure.
That's recent, though. Sorry, I'm older on the internet.
We didn't have those words way back then.
When I was making these analogies, that incel and virgin...
Back by day, we didn't have general relativity.
There were no incels back then. None of us had sex.
We just accepted. We were all computer gamers.
Nobody had sex to play video games back then, okay?
People don't remember that. There wasn't the Big Bang Theory.
You were just a loser that was stuck in the room.
You guys didn't even know sex exists, so you can use it as an insult.
We had to download sexual pictures, and it took two minutes, and you didn't even know if you were going to get the right thing by the time it finished loading.
But what I'm saying is like, okay, I think you agree that like if somebody gives you like a race, like a black person who's a woman, we can write like very cutting, scathing like insults for that person that are very otherizing.
Oh, words that would really hurt.
Yeah, that are very cutting to the person.
But like for a white guy, it's kind of hard because it's like, that's like the default.
There's not as much otherizing of those people.
So the insults you have from white guy to white guy, the insults are much harsher.
So when you start to apply the same kind of harshness to other groups, You can make them feel like they really don't belong.
And that otherizing effect is something that's very hard for me.
I can't really empathize because I've never felt it.
So I have to intellectualize it and then sympathize with it.
It's like a whole process I have to go through.
And then I try to walk other people through that.
Because if you're a white guy on the internet, which is a lot of the internet, you really don't know what that feels like.
You've never felt like that before. So you're now in a leadership position, Grandpa Destiny.
So a lot of people look up to you for that.
For that sort of pathway to empathy.
Yeah. How not to otherize.
I mean, you have felt otherizing.
You mentioned high school people not being...
Yeah, but those are always for things that, like, it's different to insult somebody for a non-immutable characteristic.
Like, okay, you think poorly about me because I'm, like, not enough money or I don't have money, but I could get more money and I could change that.
But it's different for somebody to really attack you for, like, your gender or attack you for, like, your race.
A lot of the attacks that hit the hardest is not about gender.
It's, it's, I do think that they're, like, the way women are attacked on the internet, it's the same kind of attacks you would do towards other guys, but you'd go harsher.
I feel like they're fundamentally different.
I feel like when we're attacking guys, I'm not usually attacking you on, like, the virtue of you being a guy.
But, like, if it's a woman and she's typing, saying, like, oh, did your boyfriend type that for you?
Or, like, what are you even doing here?
Like, shouldn't you be trying to find a husband?
Or, like, oh, you're, like, a stupid cunt.
Like, go start an OnlyFans or whatever.
No, but the stupidity, the intelligence aspect is what's attacked.
Yeah, but it's so much different.
Like, you can call a guy stupid, but that's because he's a guy that's being stupid.
But when you call a woman stupid, she's stupid because she's a woman.
Yeah, but I honestly think that women are called stupid more than men on the internet.
It's nothing to do, like, the attack is not gendered.
It's the gender inspires an increased level of attack.
I feel like it is gendered.
I wish we had data on this.
Have you ever heard of the XKCD comics?
Yes. And there's like that feeling that happens where when I bring on, I won't use names, but they're like YouTube people that I've brought on that have crazy opinions.
And when they're men, that person is crazy.
Oh my God, he said the crazy stuff.
He's so dumb. He's so crazy.
He's so stupid. But when it's a woman, it's like, oh my God, why do you always bring dumb women here?
Why do so many women on the internet have crazy opinions?
There's a different like minority character that has to like stand and like represent like their whole group where like white men don't typically have to.
Speaking of groups versus individuals, yes.
But then what I feel happens is then another person from that group comes, another woman comes, and people before she says anything will already feel like they're ready with that attack.
For sure. But they're ready for the attack because she's a woman.
They're going to call her she's stupid because she's a woman.
Not because she says something, just because she's a woman.
So like the group in their brain accumulates all the negative characteristics of the individuals they've met.
Not the positive, the negative.
And it becomes like this ball of stickiness.
And then that becomes the bias for their judgment of a new person that comes.
With white men, there's more of a blank slate in terms of bias of how they analyze the person.
With any of the minority group, they basically make a judgment based on the negative characteristics of the individuals they met in the past.
That leads to a system where you're just harsher towards minority groups and towards women.
How do you solve that? The most important thing for any problem ever is step one is to be aware of it.
If you're not aware of it, then you're hopelessly lost at sea.
But yeah, the first thing I like to say is just be aware of it.
There's a girl that I've had on recently, and she says a lot of, in my opinion, kind of crazy things, but people will use her as like, this is why women shouldn't be here.
This is like, she's crazy and she's a woman and blah, blah, blah.
But I can bring on a guy who says similarly dumb things and he's evaluated on his own merits because it's a guy, you know?
There's never, ever, ever been a case where I brought a stupid guy on stream and everybody's been like, this guy makes me hate men.
This guy makes me hate white people.
That has never happened. But then there's like other women that come on and it's like, now I know why incels exist or I totally understand where red pill ideology comes from, you know?
And even if the statements are kind of true, when you're making these observations over and over and over and over again, it It damages your ability to individually perceive somebody.
And then two people that make the same statements, one can be perceived more harshly just because of that, like, group bias you've got built up.
I think there's something about streaming that just brings that out of people, like, because you have to talk for, like, seven hours.
So you're like, all right, well, whatever psychological issues and complexities I have, I'm going to explore them.
They're going to be magnified. Magnified.
And then it's, Gerard, as you talked about, the memetic...
Theories are Girardian, like whatever, the things that are very similar and you're going to magnify the conflicts that you have and you're going to explore the All the different perspectives on those different conflicts.
And I mean, I don't know if it's just anecdotal, but it's nice to have women on stream.
I think the dynamic that you guys have is wonderful.
It's really interesting. So it's just the female voice in general.
I love having women on the podcast.
The female voice, I feel like, is underheard on the internet.
For sure. And I would love the internet to be a place where women feel safe to speak.
Alright, given that you're, like we talked about, a progressive with non-standard progressive views.
So you're very pro-free speech, pro-capitalism.
So given that, it's very interesting that you're also pro-establishment and pro-institutions.
So right now, if you look at the world, there's a significant distrust of institutions, at least in sort of public intellectual discourse.
What is the nature of your support for government and institutions?
Can you make the case for and against them?
There is a synergistic effect when two humans come together.
If I can speak very broadly in terms of, we'll say, utility, okay?
My happiness with one person might be 10.
The happiness with another person might be 10.
When they come together, it's like 50 between the two of them.
There's like this synergistic effect when humans work together that the sum is greater than all the individual parts or whatever.
There's like an emergent thing that happens there.
There's a capacity, there's a possibility of that.
Yeah, a possibility, sure.
Things could go really wrong. There could be a cannibalistic tribe that all eats each other, sure.
There's other failure modes, but yes.
Okay, sure, yeah. But I think, broadly speaking, are you going to be the well-actually guy?
Well, actually, sometimes cannibalism is actually good for both.
True.
Yeah, sometimes things do go wrong.
But I think broadly speaking, the fact that you're sitting here in clothing that you didn't
make and I'm sitting here on an airplane that I don't know how to fly or build, like, right?
There's a lot of cool stuff that happens when people come together and they make civilizations.
Part of that civilization building is the fact that we can specialize and it's the fact
that we can offload a bunch of trust onto third parties that we delegate the power to
make important decisions about our lives, right?
I don't know anything about how to build a combustion engine.
But I know that when I push the button on my car, it's going to drive around and the fumes aren't going to kill me and I can park it in garages and the building's not going to collapse.
And the only reason all of this works is because I've offloaded a lot of trust onto these third-party things.
And I would say that the pillars of these third-party things that society is built on are, roughly speaking, institutions.
So that might be the institution of peer review for scientific articles.
It might be the institution of voting for government, right, or the ability for us to vote in that whole process.
Yeah, the FDA, like all of these institutions are things that they need to exist because we don't have the time or the capability to individually sort through all of these things individually.
We have to rely on some third party to do it.
Okay, so you believe at scale, when we're together, we're greater than the sum of our parts.
That's the case for institutions.
Absolutely. What about the inefficiencies of bureaucracy?
Is there some aspect when, at scale, Mm-hmm.
Mm-hmm.
Mm-hmm.
Bureaucracy, which is not...
I hate it when people try to say bureaucracy is government, because bureaucracy exists a ton in private environments as well, right?
In businesses and everything. Bureaucracy introduces its own set of problems, but I mean, a bureaucracy is necessary because it's coordinating all of the underlying things in order to create something that's greater than the sum of its parts, right?
Like, all of the software developers in the world are useless without being paired with good designers in order to make their products usable by a person.
And the coordination of those people and the coordination of increasingly more and more things necessitates some level of bureaucracy.
I think we always say bureaucracy when it's like a bad, it's like a slur almost, like you're a bureaucrat, you're bureaucratic, the bureaucracy is slowing everything down.
It's like, sure, the bureaucracy slows things down, but bureaucracy also gives us things like, you know, safe medicine and safe water to drink for most of the U.S. or safe buildings to live in or safe cars to drive.
So the managers in institution versus like the software developers and the designers, the managers is the bureaucracy.
The reason bureaucracy is used as a slur is that something about human nature leads to bureaucracy often growing indefinitely and becoming less and less efficient.
I mean, this is where capitalism can come in, that capitalism puts a pressure on the bureaucracy not to grow too much because You want the bureaucracy to be useful, but not large.
Yeah, to be a certain size, yeah, of course.
To be the minimum size to get the job done.
And so capitalism provides that mechanism Government does not always.
And so that's the criticism of government, of institutions, where it can grow without a significant mechanism that says there's a cost to bureaucracy that's not being accounted for here.
We're just paying for the increasing size of government without the benefit.
Yeah, government is a special institution because it doesn't have to show itself to be financially viable.
And we kind of live in a capitalist economy where that's generally the case.
So government gets its powers from votes from the people, which introduces a whole new set of possible positives and possible negatives, right?
Having something, for instance, that gives food or shelter to homeless people, maybe you don't want that to have to run at a profit.
But giving, you know, an organization that can self-justify its budgets perpetually and indefinitely growing, maybe that's not the best thing.
Yeah, we always have to figure out how to do the constraints there.
What about the corrupting nature of power?
That comes with institutions as well.
Absolutely. So then you better pick your style of institution very carefully.
I think that the democratic institution we have in the United States today, I think, works very well.
I mean, there are other styles of government that have been tried in the past that I think lend themselves more to corruption.
Not to say that, by the way, there's not corruption in the United States.
Of course, there's going to be varying levels of corruption at all levels.
But you run into this interesting problem where authoritarian regimes can act with ruthless precision and swiftness.
Because they don't have to ask any questions.
They just do, do, do, do, do, and that's it.
But the problem is it's an authoritarian regime.
They're prone to missteps.
They're slow to respond to changing or evolving needs.
There was an interesting study that was put out a while ago that showed that every single famine that happened around the world, almost 98% of them happen under authoritarian regimes where freedom of speech is very limited.
It's very rare for a famine to happen under a democracy because press and everything makes the government more responsive to the needs of the people.
Power can corrupt. There are levels of corruption.
But you have to have a system of checks and balances on all of those different levels to make sure it doesn't run off the rails, I guess, and do a sick loop-de-loop and half the population gets...
Nice callback.
There's a lot of people that will listen to you say that the democracy in the United States is working pretty damn well and they will spit out the drink if they're drinking a drink and be very upset.
Can you make the case that they're right and you're wrong?
Can I make the case- King Steel Man.
They're right. Yeah, well, the Steel Man for them, It's that people have a lot of problems on the day-to-day.
And when they look and they see what government is doing, they might see potholes outside their house, homeless people all over their downtown, and the United States just approved another X billion amount of dollars for Ukraine.
Or they might be living in a city where half the factories are shut down, a lot of their people are out of work, but the president is on the TV talking about how to find jobs for immigrants coming in from Mexico.
And for these people, they have problems that exist in their lives.
Some of them are paying taxes to alleviate these problems, and then when they listen to the government talk, it feels like the government is not responding to the needs that they have.
And then that's one problem. Then on top of that, you've got all of these people
working in alternative media that can show you, well, look at this politician
wasting this much money or look at him double speaking here or there.
Look at Hillary Clinton saying she's got a private position and a public position.
Look at how all of these politicians have family members that are getting rich
because of their relationships with people in Congress.
Look at the revolving door between capitalist companies and the government.
How can you look at all of that, take into account that the government's not
responding to your needs, and then really feel like it's a government by the people and for the people?
Yeah, this was a very good deal, man, and good question.
How can you? How can you tell that they're not just politicians that care more about continuously winning the elections versus running government?
Effectively. They should care about winning the elections.
That's the first misconception. A lot of people say, this guy only cares about getting voted in.
This guy, he doesn't even believe in fracking or abortion.
He just changes his opinion to get voted in.
Anytime somebody says that, you should say, that's really good.
You want them to change their opinion so they get voted in.
That's the whole point of a democracy.
You don't want them to remain obstinate.
You don't want them to say, I'm not changing my opinion no matter what the people want.
You want them to evolve and adopt new opinions based on what the population, their constituents are voting for.
Yeah, but the cynical take is that they're On the surface, they're changing their opinion, but that there's a boys club, where boys means the elite, that under, in the smoke-filled rooms, in secret, they actually have their own agenda, and they're following that agenda, and they're just saying anything publicly to placate the public based on whatever the new trends are.
So, here's... Yeah, I understand.
Somebody asked me this question, and it flipped.
I 180'd completely.
I was a Bernie Sanders supporter in 2016, and my single issue voting thing was lobbying.
I thought that lobbying, the government was corrupt, they weren't responding to these people.
It completely destroyed my faith in government and everything.
And I had one question posed to me by a conservative that used to come on my stream and shout at me, and he said, and then he asked me, can you think of any...
Any popular opinion that the American public has that the government is unresponsive to?
Is there some big piece of legislation or policy or whatever that people want that the government isn't doing?
When they ask me that, I couldn't think of a single good answer.
And I'm like, oh, geez. There's a good answer.
There's drugs. There's not.
Legalization. Legalization of drugs.
Hold on a second. Yeah, go for it.
Oh, shoot. You're doing the Joe Rogan thing.
You're pushing back because I brought up weed.
Go ahead. I'm sorry.
I have become meme.
I don't even...
I don't want to interrupt your...
No, you're good. Because there's memes upon memes upon memes I can go with here.
But no, because people bring up...
Okay, there's no issues.
There's no issues that the government is not representing of the public...
So here's the issue. So somebody will bring up, like, well, what about the legalization of drugs?
Okay? The first issue people have is, one, they look at national polling.
Very few things are decided on a national level.
So that's the first huge mistake.
Arguably, a lot of BLM made mistakes in this arena where they're saying, like, why isn't the government doing anything about policing?
Federal government can't do anything about policing.
That's going to be your – sometimes not even your state government.
Sometimes your local city government.
The people that elect, like, your chief of police, your police commissioner, that's coming from your mayor, right?
Mm-hmm. So you've got people looking, one, at the wrong parts of the government to even figure out the solution to the problem.
Two, oftentimes for polling, the questions are vague enough that you can poll very high, but when you get into the weeds on things, no pun intended, you start to realize like, oh shoot, this is more complicated than I thought.
I don't know the numbers in particular for legalization of marijuana, but this is what I'm going to guess is the case.
If you poll and you say, should we legalize marijuana?
That number might poll at like 65-70%.
But that's including people that are in favor of medical marijuana.
If you were to pull like, should we legalize, should we decriminalize recreational use of marijuana, that number might drop to like 52%.
And then if you pull like, should we completely legalize, not just decriminalize, but completely legalize recreational use of marijuana, that number might drop to like 40%.
There's like all these different ways you can pull around issues where people are like, oh no, we broadly agree on this topic.
But when you really figure out, well, do you?
Do we really agree? Or is there just like broad consensus around a thing that's never going to show up like in a piece of legislation?
A really good example, one example I do know is socialized healthcare.
I think if you pull, there was a time...
A few years ago, where if you poll America, do you think every American citizen should have access to, like, free healthcare?
I think that answer, that poll, like, 74% yes.
But when you asked, should the government be the sole provider of healthcare, it dropped to, like, 26%.
It dropped 50 points.
And you could see it was both asking questions about single-payer, but the way that it was asked was so different that even if you all—it looks like there's consensus.
There's not nearly as much consensus as people think around certain ideas.
You're right, you're right, you're right, you're right.
That polls, the way you ask the polls really matters.
But when you ask, should the government be in charge of a thing, that also biases the answer, right?
Because there's such a negative experience with government creating a.gov site that runs the thing.
But sometimes... Sometimes.
I think if you dig in, if you have a one-hour conversation with each individual citizen, I think you will understand that, yes, there is support for socialized medicine.
Like, it's not... The argument has to be made, though.
Yeah. What do you mean, the argument has to be made?
Like, if you just ask a conservative, like, what about a single payer?
They're going to tell you no. You might be able to build up to an argument for it, but you're going to have to make the case for it.
No, but I thought we were talking about the feeling deep inside your mind and heart.
Does the government represent that?
Oh. So it's not like some shallow surface layer public opinion.
Does the government effectively represent what the people want?
Not a shallow survey, but deeply what they want.
I'm not actually that familiar with the debates over healthcare, but let's maybe look at an easier one.
Maybe you'll say it's harder.
War. War is a really good example where the government was very responsive, I think, to the people.
You think so? So, Iraq, Afghanistan, the government didn't manipulate public opinion?
There's an argument to be made that they did in terms of, like, WMD and everything, but after 9-11, were you in the United States after 9-11?
Mm-hmm. After 9-11, I legitimately- That seems accusatory.
Like, where were you in 9-11?
Just checking, okay? All right, cool.
I have evidence and witnesses.
No, okay, all right. I'm very defensive right now.
It's very strange. Look into it, Alex Jones.
I think after 9-11, we could have gone to war with any country in the world.
We were ready, because all of America was like, oh my god.
And they pointed to Iraq, and the reasons for the WMDs was kind of dumb, but I don't think we even needed WMDs to go to Iraq.
We could have just said, You know, Saddam Hussein was giving medical aid to Taliban, Al-Qaeda, Iraq, let's go, and we would have gone for it.
But post-Iraq, Iraq was for a while popular and then became obviously deeply unpopular, Iraq and Afghanistan.
And I think you could see that influence other foreign policy that the United States had.
For instance, we opted more towards drone warfare than troops on the ground for places like Yemen.
We opted more towards sending money and help instead of boots on the ground for places like Syria.
And I think that a lot of that was kind of in response to how unpopular the Iraq stuff had become.
And when you looked at a lot of elections afterwards, even for Obama, like one of the defining characteristics of a lot of campaigns were like, I'm going to close Guantanamo Bay.
I'm going to get us out of foreign wars, even up to Trump.
I'm going to, you know, I'm not going to stop doing all this weird stuff in the Middle East.
But they didn't still withdraw from Afghanistan.
Yeah. They didn't withdraw, but they definitely like tapered off and weren't like as aggressively pushing those types of conflicts because they knew it was unpopular.
But I think if you also consider perfect information or good information, if you ask a lot of people, are you okay spending this amount of money for this purpose?
So a military conflict in Iraq and Afghanistan, I think almost from the very beginning they would say no.
After 9-11? I feel like maybe like a few days after 9-11.
I remember Freedom Rise.
We were so mad at it.
Well, there's some memes and so on, yes.
But the nature of the public support for the war, was there public support in 2003, which is when the invasion happened?
I feel like initially there was a lot.
I remember seeing it on, but then I also lived in a Republican household and I was not very like media savvy at the time.
And I don't know if the nature of that public support had to do with WMDs or with 9-11.
Because the weird- It became about WMDs.
But I wonder what is the, if you were to poll people and let's say hypothetically there was above 50% support for the war, what would be the nature of that support?
And to what degree is the government actually representing the will of the people versus- Some complex mechanism like the military-industrial complex is manipulating the narrative that's controlling public opinion.
And then there's the media that gets a lot of attention by being divided and how they're shaping the narrative through the mechanism of division.
There's a lot of complicated things at play.
It's not just like the people and then the government and that's, yeah, for sure I agree that there are going to be different elements at play.
And how much of those elements that lead us astray can be attributed to the largeness of the different systems and the different institutions like the media institutions and government.
The institutions that have a monopoly on violence, let's put it this way, which is one way to define government.
Sure. It's complicated.
There's definitely going to be different institutions at play.
But I think that like, all I would say is like in reference to my original point, when there becomes like broad consensus around a thing, I think the government will usually follow.
It's not going to fight. It's going to follow more often than not.
But I think that a lot of times I think Americans think that there's more consensus around certain issues than there actually are.
So like a really good example, we're on that war point too.
What caused like the lowest dip in Biden's approval rating?
I'm pretty sure it was right after we pulled out of Afghanistan, which I think if I would have asked people like a year before, like, let's assume that we could pull out of Afghanistan.
The government's probably going to collapse after we leave because they just don't have the will to fight.
They don't have the support. They don't, whatever.
It's just not going to work. But like, no Americans are going to die.
There might be a couple other people who go, but like, no Americans are going to die.
We're going to get out of Afghanistan. Would you support that?
I think broadly speaking, I think more than 60 or 70% of Americans are like, yeah, that
would be fine.
But then when it actually plays on TV, when we see the people hanging onto the planes,
when we see like helicopter embassies, some of the courts and politicians, well, now it's
like, oh my God, this was horrible and it was so botched.
And it was so like, it could have gone so much better.
It's like, well, could it have gone better?
Like maybe, maybe not.
But I mean, it seems like you can have consensus around a certain opinion.
But the way that things play out and the way that people actually feel, it's actually way,
way, way more complicated.
there's not usually this broad consensus opinion.
What...
Alright, yeah, go ahead.
I mean, just to lay my cards on the table, I have faith in the power of effective government.
I just... I have a lot of concern about what happens as institutions grow in size.
For sure. And I just have a lot of worry about the natural corrupting influence on the individuals and on the system as a whole.
Like the boys club nature of it.
I don't know, there must be a better term.
But basically they They agree to the game, and they play the game, and there's a generational aspect, momentum to the game, and they more and more stop being responsive to the people that they represent.
I just feel like there is that mechanism.
And I think the nice thing, democracy, elections are resistance to that natural human mechanism.
Also, the balances of power is a resistance to that mechanism.
In some ways, the media that reveals the bullshit of politicians is also a resistance to that mechanism.
It's hard to be full of shit as a politician because people will try to catch you on it.
So there's an honesty method there that keeps you honest to some degree.
But it still feels like politicians are going to politician.
Yeah, they definitely play their games.
That is true. There's probably always going to be that meta-narrative over governance that just develops as you have to form relationships and play games to get legislation passed and everything.
The only reason why I don't like it when people attack institutions is because, one, institutions are incredibly important, arguably paramount—no, they are—to keeping society running.
Two, I think sometimes when we shift the blame onto institutions too much, I think that we
lose sight of what the real problems are.
So for instance, in the United States today, people might be very critical of the government
not getting much done, but then everybody turns their eyes to the government for being
ineffective.
What I would argue is I would say the government is actually incredibly effective and it's
showcasing the will of the American people really well right now, which is we are historically
more divided than we have ever been.
If I were to just look at the people and I were to say we have a historic divide that
is getting rapidly blown apart by things like the internet and the media.
If that exists, well, what would I expect that government to look like?
I wouldn't expect that government to be governing very effectively.
I would expect that government to show that legitimate divide in people.
Do you think that divide, we have a perception of a large divide between left and right.
Do you think that's a real divide that's in this country?
Narrow the language. What do you mean by real divide?
Do you think there is that divide in ideology, that there's a large number of people that believe a certain set of policies and the different set of policies?
Or is it just the perception on Twitter?
No, I think there is a large divide in terms of belief.
I don't think there's very much divide between any people in terms of what they, on the most fundamental levels, want in terms of human beings.
But in terms of Democrat versus Republican right now, I think there is a huge divide in terms of the direction they want to see the country go and what they believe, really, and what they even believe is reality, right?
Unfortunately, that's where we've gotten to.
Can I just speak about the mechanism of the left and right here, maybe on the mimetic rivalry aspect?
Is there some aspect to the left on which you're a part of that attacks their own for ideological impurity more than the right does?
Is it the bigotry of small differences?
There's a concept where when you're near somebody who is very slightly different than you, you want to destroy, but when you're with somebody that's way different than you, you don't.
I think the left does it, but I think the right does it too.
I didn't realize it until I started dipping more into conservative communities, but oh my god.
The people from the Daily Wire and the people from Turning Point and the America First people, all these different groups of people hate each other and they fight each other so much.
They hire and fire sometimes employees.
They talk smack about each other.
I think there's a lot of political division between both sides.
I think that the left just kind of gets highlighted more because it's like the internet and a lot of the internet spaces have a lot of left-leaning people.
So you see like the crazy communists and the crazy progressives and the crazy center-left liberals and the crazy blah, blah, blah.
Whereas like a lot of the right-leaning people have kind of been pushed off of the main areas of the internet now.
Interesting. My sense was that it's hard to exist on the center-left, but maybe because I just don't have the full spectrum view of the political divide.
It felt like center-left is a difficult position to occupy.
Yeah, I would definitely say so, yeah.
I don't know if it's that difficult to be center-right.
It's very difficult to be center-right.
I think, actually, maybe even more difficult.
Interesting. Because a center-right person might be somebody who's, like, conservative, but not a fan of Trump.
And you're, like, over.
Yeah. Look like Liz Cheney, right?
You've had politicians that are just like, they didn't back the Trump stuff and now they're gone.
Or you might be like center-right, but you don't think the election was stolen?
And now you're like, half the Republican Party's looking at you like you're crazy, you know?
That's true. That's true.
I think there's a Ben Shapiro I'm talking with.
I think he publicly spoke against Trump, right?
He did initially, but I feel like he softened his language upon him pretty significantly.
So there's a significant pressure to kind of cop-out to a certain kind of messaging.
Which the whole Republican Party is feeling right now.
Jeez, two years from now, that election is going to be insane.
It's just hard. Okay, so to generalize, it's hard to be in the center, it feels like.
For sure. To center and then do a random walk among the policies around that.
I don't know what that mechanism is.
I mean, it makes people like me not feel good being in the center.
It seems like people are just not nice to people in the center.
The public, the Twitter machine is not nice to people who are open-minded in the center.
Yeah. Is there some truth to that?
Two reasons for that. One is because I think a lot of people that market themselves as center are legitimately spineless cowards and deserve to be called out.
I've never killed a man, but today might be my first.
Oh no. And I'll take over, like I told you, I'll take over your stream.
With the AI? With the AI. Is that guy going to be streaming in the background?
Hey fellas! Okay, gotcha.
Gotcha. Gotcha. Lots of gotchas.
Lots of gotchas. Okay, gotcha.
Okay, gotcha. And decrease the emotion, which already is a pretty low level of emotion.
Just decrease it completely.
When people are screaming at you and accusing stuff, just remain calm.
Absolutely. Emotionless.
The gaslighter strategy. Yeah.
Okay, so what were we talking about?
So I don't...
I don't ever identify as center or anything because it's got such a bad reputation.
Fuck that. I stand center with a spine.
It's called being open-minded.
And it's not center, left, and right.
Those are just labels. Here's a really good quote my mom said to me when I was really young.
She said, Stevie, don't ever let your mind be so open that your brain falls out.
And that's what I find that a lot of center people do.
That's not what she told me last night.
Why are you like this? I'm sorry.
Okay, I'm glad I can bring that.
I'm glad you feel like this is a safe space.
Like I said, people are non-judgmental.
If you want to talk about fucking my mom, you know what?
You're totally within your rights.
I didn't say that. You said that.
I didn't say that. I support that.
She's a beautiful woman. Her husband probably wouldn't be too happy about it, but you know.
I didn't say there was any sexual relations.
It was just that having a conversation with her.
You projected that.
That says more about you than me.
Anyway, go ahead about spineless center.
There is some aspect to that which is amorphous.
To me, center means you think freely about each individual policy without being stuck to a Yeah, but a lot of people don't do that.
They call themselves centrist, but then they're anti-establishment, essentially, on everything.
I don't know your position on the vaccines or anything, but I met a lot of free and open thinkers who were like, you know what?
I'm open to everything, and it's an experimental vaccine, and I'm going to eat hydroxychloroquine and ivermectin because that's what the institutions are telling me not to take, and I think Fauci got too much money from that company, but I'm an open thinker.
I'm at MIT. What do you think my position on vaccines is exactly?
I hear a lot of crazy things from a lot of people, okay?
You might be from MIT, but I know you from the internet, okay?
And people from the internet are weird and crazy, so...
Yeah. Well, I... Who knows?
I don't like arrogance, and I have criticized scientists during COVID, a lot of people, but scientists included, having arrogance.
Which is fair. But...
And I think there's a lot of good criticism to be made of different scientific and medical establishments over a lot of stuff.
But nobody can make those good criticisms because they're too, like, obsessed over, like, just trying to have the anti-establishment answer.
And that is what is upsetting me the most.
Like, I think there are good conversations to be had about a lot of stuff related to how we handled the coronavirus.
You know, were lockdowns effective?
Was there enough data to support the huge measures we took?
You know, why didn't we have the option to show, I was infected a month ago, why do I need to be vaccinated?
Why wasn't that option ever a thing in the United States?
I don't think it was. There are really good questions to be asked there.
But all the people asking the questions are also trying to tell you that ivermectin and monoclonal antibodies are the way to go for everything, and the vaccine is evil, and they're just going to turn you gay like the frogs.
And it's like, Jesus, there's no place to reasonably criticize from, because all of the people that are criticizing aren't doing it with an open mind or...
They're not reading studies or doing anything.
They're saying, like, I do my own research, which means they listen to whatever the last guy on Joe Rogan said, and now they are parroting that opinion 100%.
Easy no. Easy no, bros.
The last guy on Joe Rogan, not Joe Rogan, okay?
That Robert Malone guy on Joe Rogan got me real fired up.
That's one guest. People see him as, like, the father of mRNA technology.
He published one paper, okay?
What do you mean people? Which people think that?
Joe Rogan fans. I run into these people.
I start arguing with people, and they start studying me.
But what about- I'm a Joe Rogan fan, and I appreciate the vaccine.
That's good. I'm glad you do.
But there's definitely... But you said there's a type.
What's the type of Joe Rogan fan?
Anti-establishment. I think that's not Joe Rogan.
That's a general public discourse.
There's a default anti-establishment.
On the right and the left, that's the default easy thing to go to.
I think Joe Rogan fans are definitely a certain type of anti-establishment, though.
Like, I could guess the Joe Rogan fan...
Like, if I were to do general population versus Joe Rogan fan, who do you think is more likely to be anti-vaccine?
Do you have data on this? Or are you just guessing?
Just guessing. Yeah.
I think you are actually judging.
I am. I think you're judging.
Because I think you're also...
The beautiful thing about podcasting, this could be similar to streaming, is there's a large number of people that just listen.
Like, what does it mean to be a Joe Rogan fan?
I don't think you just listen.
I think people listen and absorb the information.
I would say that the Joe Rogan fan base is as divided in the vaccine as the general public.
Gotcha. Man, I'm going to look for polling data on that.
I'm sure somebody's got to have done it out there.
But you're basically revealing the fact they have no data.
You're using your own judgment.
for sure, based on how he's had conversations about how his experience with the coronavirus and then based on the
guests that have come on that have talked and echoed a lot of like anti-vax talking points and been completely
unchallenged and then based on statements he's made about like myocarditis and the vaccine and everything as well
Yeah, so that it's the level of challenge or not that he's doing
Oh, yeah, and then what his true positions are and then the types of guests he typically chooses to bring on to talk
about The vaccines. Yeah, okay, but that represents somehow a
deep anti-establishment feeling versus just a vaccine. I mean I've seen the vaccine
and other things being a thing that broke people
I think all of the coronavirus, that whole one or two years broke a lot of people.
There's a lot of emotion, and the emotion quickly solidified into an opinion that almost had nothing to do with thinking through and updating your knowledge and so on.
You just made up your mind.
Yeah, but I think a lot of it comes from that anti-establishment place.
The vaccine represents the ultimate It was a huge private company backed by a huge public government.
And there's Fauci, and there's Biden, and there's Pfizer, and there's all these countries locking us up in our homes, telling us to do a thing.
Like the vaccine was like the ultimate like submission tool to like show you that the
government owns you. Not only you have to get injected once, it's a series, and then you got
to get boosters and it's like they're trying to keep you under their thumb and it's that's the
control. I feel like that vaccine became like the ultimate rallying cry between like do you support
Are you a sellout that is going to believe whatever the government tells the sheep to take?
Or are you going to be like the guy that stands against the crowd and gets fired from his job and pulls his kids from school because they're not going to let the evil Fauci medicine, you know, jab them in the arm?
And the funny thing is the crowd that stands against the institution is not larger than the crowd of sheep.
There's like one sheep standing there.
Sure, yeah. Or it feels that way sometimes.
One vaccinated sheep.
Well, okay. What's the defense of institutions?
How do you regain the trust of institutions?
Like, first of all, do you think that there's ways in which WHO, CDC failed?
And do you think there's criticism towards Pfizer and the big pharma companies that deserve it?
Damn, the pharma companies, I'm not sure.
For CDC and WHO, so here's a criticism that I have of all of academia, and I feel it's stronger and stronger every day.
I don't think it's enough to be a researcher or to be correct about issues.
Academia needs to increase its ability to communicate.
It is just an unbelievable, unmitigated failure that academics are unwilling to wade into the complicated topics that exist today because other people are, you know?
First you call me spineless, and then you call me a bad communicator.
But no, look, you're here. You're doing it.
So you get props for me, okay?
Good job. That motherfucker.
But I'm sure that you must have heard another fellow academic, a fellow colleague, express some amount of frustration about in their specific discipline.
They know something to be true, and they know that a lot of the messaging is wrong or bad in the public about it, but they're never going to step out and say anything because either one, they're very measured and careful with their take, which they feel is incompatible with what people want to hear, Or two, they're really worried that they might be incorrect, so they're going to be cautious while everybody else is going out and, like, hardcore. And they also don't have the support of institutions for them to go out on a limb.
Yeah, that too. So, like, to take risks.
For example, I've heard that with lab leak theory.
I've had a lot of biologists, biologists, friends that are like, yeah, it's obviously leaked from a lab, like, early on.
Oh, maybe. Okay. We can fight over this one.
Sorry, go ahead. No, no, keep talking.
We can fight over this.
Okay, I should sort of backstep and say that's like you talk about shooting the shit.
You haven't really investigated, but it's your gut.
Like this doesn't make any sense.
They would never say that publicly.
Of course. Mostly because you're saying, like, what they would all say is, like, we want to see data.
Yeah, which would be good, which is fine.
So they're going with, like, this is too many coincidences in the same place.
That's the logic.
But they don't want to say anything because there's no data.
You need to have evidence. You need to have actual evidence to say one way or the other.
There's that. But there's also, just like you said, I mean, effective communication.
You're a fan of Sean Carroll.
Oh, yes! Okay.
He's like one of the only people in this whole planet that I like besides you.
I love Sean Carroll. Anytime Sean Carroll is brought up as evidence, there's a smile that comes over your face of like joy, of like a little kid thinking about Santa Claus.
Okay, I love Sean Carroll too.
Just to be clear, I love Sean Carroll because I hate this divide between, like, you're either STEM or you're, like, philosophy, arts, and all that other stuff.
And the two worlds can ever cross. And I love that he was so good at physics, but, like, explores and pays attention to all of the, like, sociological stuff, too.
It's so rare to find that quality in a person.
He's legit one of the really, really, really special minds.
But you don't have to be a Sean Carroll.
You can be just a little... Better at educating.
Another person in the medical and the health space is somebody named Andrew Huberman, a friend of mine from Stanford.
He's an incredible educator.
There's the kind of process in science they usually call review or survey papers, where you basically Summarize all that's going on, integrate it, and draw wisdom from it, and also project where is the discipline headed?
And Andrew does that basically on all these sub-components of the different stuff going on in neuroscience and biology, neurobiology, all of that.
He does a podcast called Huberman Lab where he just summarizes all and is able to explain what does that actually mean for your For your life in terms of protocols of how to make your life better.
I feel like people should be able to do that more and more.
But with virology, oh boy, that's a tricky one.
That's a really tricky one.
I wish that people could have honest conversations.
Like, I attack a lot of people that do the lab leak theory stuff, but truly, we should be able to have that conversation publicly.
It just, it always feels like the people that are having the conversation don't ever really want to have the conversation.
They're not being honest. Like, I'm a guy that, like, does his own research, and it's so boring, reading studies, and a lot of it I can only do abstracts, and, like, I, like, It's so much work.
But I'll never, ever say that about myself.
I'm a guy that does his own research because every time I hear somebody say that, they don't do any research.
When they say they do their own research, what they mean is they've seen one podcast and their opinion on this completely.
What podcast is that? Definitely not mine because it was mine.
I wouldn't be criticizing anything they say.
But yeah, so like lab leak is another one where it's like, well, how do you know it's lab leak?
How do I know it's lab leak?
Because Fauci lied and Hunter Biden laptop.
And it's like, okay, come on, you haven't engaged with it at all.
There's really interesting research that shows there's a really strong study that shows that there's a high degree of certainty that it came from the wet markets.
Very, very high degree of certainty.
And there was an article that came out recently where it's like, Senate concludes that virus actually came from the Wuhan Virology Lab or whatever.
And that whole article, if you actually read it, it never says that in the article.
I don't know why they tweeted it with that headline.
But yeah, to back up, I'm sorry.
I think we should have...
You should be sorry. Yeah.
I'm not sorry, actually. I get to ramble here, okay?
I'm here for a long time. I rescind my apology, okay?
I actually rescind my apology.
We should be able to have challenging conversations about things, but you gotta, man, be well-read on both sides.
Not this, like, I do my own research, so I don't believe anything that Fauci says.
Like, come on, dude. You can do better than that.
Not you personally, but... Gotcha.
So for people who don't know, that's the catchphrase.
Gotcha. Through all tragedy and triumph, through all the rollercoaster of life, your response to it is gotcha.
Well, actually, let me jump to that before I continue with political discourse.
Psychologically, you are in a lot of heated debates, and you're usually super calm under fire until you're not.
Sometimes you lose your temper completely.
Very rarely, but...
That's like your opinion, man.
Let me ask you about your psychology.
What are psychologically your strengths and weaknesses that you're self-aware about?
I think I'm very non-judgmental, so I can entertain a lot of different thoughts without agreeing with them or condoning them.
I think that's a really big benefit to me.
For whatever reason, I seem to be pretty calm in dealing with annoying people.
It's why I got promoted at the casino so fast.
I could deal with drunks or whatever.
It just didn't affect me that much.
What percent of the population is annoying?
Depends on how you're engaging with them.
Most people aren't really annoying ever.
But if you're doing like political debate, what percentage is annoying?
I guess it depends on who I'm debating and what the topic is.
I guess I'm trying to point out the fact that sometimes you can say that reveals something about you if you think a large percent of people are annoying.
Well, I would say working graveyard shift when alcohol is involved, that percentage of people goes very, very, very high.
Or to be more fair, actually, it's not a high percentage, truly.
But if you're a server, one bad customer can ruin the rest of your shift.
So you only need like one or two people acting in that manner to just like totally throw you off.
And you're able to, at least these days, not allow that one customer to throw you off, quote unquote.
Yeah, very much like a, I noticed this, especially after having a son, there's something about like six-year-old kids or whatever, where it's like, if they get mad, they're never gonna be mad for that long.
Like, they'll move on. Like, that's my mentality.
I'm like a six-year-old kid. Like, I might be mad about something, but I'll get over it in like 30 minutes or an hour.
Like, yeah. Yeah. I'm pretty good about not carrying that through.
It's very rare that I'll hold a grudge against anybody or be angry about something or really disaffected by something over the long term.
That almost never happens to me.
What are your weaknesses psychologically?
I still have a problem with projecting things.
I think we all probably do, but like my mind onto others, it's like, if I understand this and I've said this, you should understand it.
And if you're not, you're dumb. That's like an issue that I, I still have that where I project too much.
What about like holding grudges and stuff like that?
I'd never hold grudges.
I'm like the least grudgy person ever.
It's kind of a meme in my community because anybody can always like come back.
As long as they're acting different, yeah?
What about the... As long as they're acting different.
As long as they're acting different. I mean, alright.
The reason why I say that is because...
So, for instance, nobody likes us, but I have a strong stance on apologies, and then I hate them.
I don't ever want to hear an apology.
I don't care about them ever.
They don't mean anything to me. If you did something bad, as long as you've, like, fixed the behavior and you're not doing that thing, then we're generally chill.
So, like, there's been a lot of people that have been involved in weird stuff with me, but then, like, they go off, they do their thing, and they come back, and it's like, okay, cool.
As long as you don't do it again, like, we're fine.
Like, it's all good. Damn it. I'm sorry you feel that way.
It's not your fault, Stephen.
It's not your fault. Okay, gotcha.
You said plenty of negative stuff, positive stuff and negative stuff about Hassan.
Yeah. This is my podcast.
I get to get you to force you to say positive things.
What do you love? I'm all about love.
Let's go back to grilling me on the R word stuff.
You're gonna make me compliment Hassan?
This is gonna be a harder conversation than that.
All right. We're going to get you to feel emotions.
Okay. So for people who don't know, he's another popular political streamer.
I think you had, as the kids call it, a bridge burning over Bernie Sanders.
I don't know. My research is very limited on this.
But what do you respect and love most about Hasan?
He puts in a lot of work.
When he was growing his stream from 2,000 concurrent viewers to 15,000, he was streaming 12 hours a day, every single day.
So that was out. I remember he did a lot of work.
He does seem to be pretty good at networking and socializing and making the correct friends and connections to continue to build his business.
What about him as a political thinker?
I know you don't think highly of him in that regard, but I think that's unfair.
I honestly want to push back on that because...
I have zero respect for him as a political thinker.
There's not going to be almost anything.
Oh, I will say, I admire the fact that through no actual capability or ability of his own, he manages to wind up at some of the correct answers just because he's towing the lines.
Good job for him on that.
He's got a lot of correct opinions, just he has no idea why.
I think that's undeserved. I think that's too harsh, man.
Okay. The reason I bring that up is I feel like there is a deep grudge in there somehow.
So you're the father now, since you're so old, the grandfather of the political debate on livestream, political debater.
So there could be some grudge about that.
Split that happened or not enough credit given or all that kind of stuff.
I just think he's somebody that has a left-leaning ideology that's different than yours.
He was a Bernie supporter, right?
And I guess you were not. Can you explain to me where the division is?
He exemplifies everything that I absolutely hate about politics.
Which is what? Which is shallow engagement, heavily ideologically driven.
And you're not ideologically driven?
Absolutely not. Free of ideology.
That's what we're talking about, like the free thinker in the real meaning of that word.
Yeah, so the way, let me qualify.
Issue by issue of thinking. Let me qualify what I mean when I say that.
I spent a lot of time, unfortunate time, delving into the boring world of philosophy.
I spent a lot of time thinking about like, what are my ethical positions?
How do I feel about myself, the people around me, and how that relates to the world around me?
And then from all of these positions, I think you might have used the phrase first principles earlier,
from these kind of like first principles, out of that is where all of my political positions are built out of, like
full stop.
So if you ask me a question like, how do you feel about like the right to own a firearm?
Or how do you feel about social healthcare?
Like, we can walk through, well, this is how I feel about it.
It's like a thing from the government.
This is where the government gets its power.
This is ethically how groups of people are supposed to function.
This is morally how we relate to each other.
And personally, this is how I feel. Like, I'll be able to do every single political belief back there.
It's not like I'm telling you.
Like, if I were to ask Hassan, what do you feel about this political topic?
He's going to tell me what progressives are supposed to say.
I don't know what he thinks about it. I don't know if he thinks about it.
Don't you think that's a cynical take?
Why is he, just because his views coincide with the mainstream narrative, mainstream viewpoints of progressive thinkers, I mean, why does that mean he's not thinking?
Because his engagement with every subject is incredibly shallow, 100% predictable.
I could probably program a script to give you every single potential answer you could have to any single question you could give him.
Again, I think that's a pretty cynical take.
Okay, it could be the case that his brain perfectly aligns with every single mainstream.
No, but I don't know if you know it perfectly aligns.
Because I think you're just taking a very select, just like streamers do of each other, a very select slice that represents the perfect alignment, as opposed to looking at a person struggling with ideas and thinking through ideas, and then giving them a pass, like a lot of people, like I give you a pass, on Just the fact that you say a lot of crazy shit on stream for drama.
I don't say things for drama.
It might be dramatic, but...
I mean, you've evolved as a fish evolves legs.
You've evolved a mechanism which creates controversy.
Sure. You could say it's not intention, but it happens.
Okay, sure. The extremists kind of learn that kind of thing.
And so I'm sure Hassan does the same kind of stuff.
And so, like, underneath it, there's still a thinking being that's contending with political ideas.
You don't think so. He does a really good job of hiding it.
There are other political figures that I really don't like that I wouldn't say the same thing about.
So, like, I don't know if you have Vosch written in there.
I'm like, okay, that's a person that he also split out of my community and grew up to something.
I know he hates me, and he's an anti-fan community, and they all hate me.
Okay, tell me something you love above Vosch.
I can tell you a lot of things about Vosch.
I think Vosch legitimately thinks through a lot of his political positions.
I admire, or did admire, that he has, like, his own, like, positions he would take, sometimes contrary to people further left than him.
He's got some positions that don't fit his ideology kind of at all, like he's his own intermittent thinker.
Rhetorically, he's very effective.
He was willing to sit down and do research for, like, his debates and everything.
He would spend a lot of time practicing, like, his rhetorical effectiveness and navigating conversations.
He intentionally and purposefully built a community that exemplified his values.
Yeah, I've got a lot. We are completely split and hate each other now.
Why? Why?
First of all, hate is a strong...
Why the hate? Okay, I don't hate him, but he hates me because we had a couple of really big debates.
What happened? Well, one had to do with whether or not you should live your values.
And can you give me the story that's a charitable interpretation?
I always give charitable interpretation.
You don't. I absolutely do!
You don't. Wait, Nate, what happened?
Five minutes ago, you talking about Hassan.
Everything I said about Hassan is true.
There is no steel man there, okay?
That's not charitable. I'm sorry.
If you can prove me wrong, I would love for you to do it, okay?
I'm using my gut instinct.
Usually when somebody feels strongly about another person in that way, it's not coming from a place of data and reason.
It's coming from a place of emotion.
It's coming from a place of resentment and grudge and all that kind of stuff.
Yeah, I understand. There's emotions deep in there.
So the gotcha is hiding...
The gotcha is a surface of an iceberg, and there's a deep ocean underneath that you yourself have not explored.
I disagree, but I understand what you mean.
And LAV is actually a doorway.
The young LAV is a doorway for you to explore the depths of the ocean.
Get into that ocean to find my fish, my pre-evolved form.
Yeah. I understand why you think the way you do, and you should.
You shouldn't believe me, and I understand that, because if somebody told me the same thing, I'd think, you probably just really don't like this person for a reason or two.
I understand why you think that way, okay?
The reality is, though, for any political person that I disagree with, like, I can give them a fair shake.
It's one of the few things I think I do exceedingly well on my stream.
Even with Hassan, there's been drama that he's been involved in, and I've, like, very...
When I'm involved in drama, he'll always throw me under the bus, but when he's involved in stuff, I'll always say, like, oh, like, I think Hassan was right here, or I think that he meant this...
There was a thing that came up once we were on livestream fail.
He was getting roasted because he referred to somebody, he used the expression shitskin
to refer to somebody's, like the way they looked.
And I have only ever heard that in the context of 4chan people
talking about like Indians or like black people.
Like it's a racial thing.
But I could tell the context and everything that he was saying.
He was insulting some guy.
I think he was kind of like incel, virgin, or whatever.
He was going for, like, acne skin.
I think that's what he meant when he said it.
And there were a whole bunch of people that were insulting.
He was like, oh my god, did he just say racist term?
And I was like, no, I don't think he was racist.
I think he was, like, he was just reaching for words, and that's what came out.
So, like, that's an example of me being shared.
Okay, but didn't you criticize him for something?
I was trying to, like, googled why the hell you guys split out, because I thought your friends, you should be, like...
You split up over a Kamala Harris video, but go ahead.
I feel like you criticized them over something.
Okay, this is a very vague memory, but you criticized them over something, and I felt that criticism wasn't charitable.
Was it Pete Buttigieg stuff?
Yeah, Pete Buttigieg. Yes, yes, yes, yes.
Yeah, so I've said this a million times, but no amount of context or no amount of nuance is ever acceptable to people.
I don't think Hassan is homophobic, but I think the comments made about Pete Buttigieg were really homophobic.
That's what he said, right? Yeah.
And there were a lot of people making a lot of comments that made me really uncomfortable about Pete Buttigieg.
That was insane to me.
Spurred by the comments of Hassan?
No, but it was an environment of progressives.
All the progressives were attacking Pete, and I felt like his gayness became the subject.
Yeah, but why throw Hassan under the bus for that?
Because he was jumping along with all of those types of insults.
You don't think you've done the same kind of stuff?
If I do, call me out and I'll probably say I shouldn't have done that.
That's what the R word was about.
That's a good call out. No, but like your friend, like you should privately tell him, right?
Like, hey. Well, no, by then we were sworn enemies, so.
So that wasn't the reason.
No, no, no. It was over a Kamala Harris video.
Sworn enemies. He hates me.
What am I supposed to say? Listen, for all of these people, I will accept them back into my life if they ever want to come back in at any point in time.
But usually they're the ones. If they correct themselves, right?
No, I'm not expecting anybody to...
So here's the deal with Vosh and Hassan.
These are like the three... We're the three guys online.
None of us will talk to each other.
Hassan, because he won't give clout to anybody, and Vosh, because he thinks I'm bad faith.
And then neither of them will talk to me because they both hate me.
You guys should go on a camping trip together.
It's like Brokeback Mountain, but three-way.
And just like rejoin, re-find...
Yeah, that could be a thing. Re-find and appreciate for each other.
Honestly, just from the internet perspective, for me as just stepping into this world...
There's some aspect to which you have a responsibility.
I hate that word. Good word.
Don't run from it. You have an opportunity.
I wish you guys would kind of be the beacon of like forgiveness and friendship and like camaraderie and that kind of stuff.
Yeah, I agree. And even if we disagree, it would be really good content for us to argue.
Yeah, like shit talk, like friends shit talk.
Sure. Versus not, like the fact that you guys don't talk to each other.
Like, I would love for you to shit talk publicly with the camaraderie always there.
Like, there's love in the beginning, love in the end, but you beat the shit out of each other in the middle.
And that's what live streaming is for, the political discourses.
That's great political discourse.
Versus, I think, what underlies some jealousy and so on.
You get this many followers.
I just want to make sure you're clear to your audience.
Everybody has, to your audience, I'm sure you have flaws that I'm just not, I mean, in this dynamic.
It's hard to find, you know, because I'm...
Your only flaw is you're too modest, yeah.
So why did you guys split up?
Because I would love it, honestly, just let me just put that idea out there for you guys to...
Yeah, it's out there, of course.
Everybody talks. It's crazy that the three largest political debate left-leaning people online can't do any type of content or collaboration at all.
It's so stupid. What was the reason you guys split up?
Kamala Harris? So, Hasan's entry into kind of like the Twitch political debate world was in, I think, 2018.
I think he did a debate with Charlie Kirk.
And he reached out to me to kind of like review that debate, to like go on, to go over it on stream.
And he came on, we went over it, and then we kind of friendship developed.
We hung out in real life. I think when I came to LA, the guy slept on his couch.
We played with his dog. We were like kind of friends.
And as time went on, I think he was a little bit more, he was farther left than he let on.
So like, I was a social democrat, he was a social democrat.
But back in those days, like 2018, when people said they were a social democrat, they really met socialists, but they just didn't want to say it.
So he was farther left than me.
me and we had a lot of deep divides in our approach to politics.
Whereas I was very much like a first principles, this is my whole political position and he
was very much kind of like a – this is like the political ideology I'm involved in and
this is kind of like the field that I kind of like navigate in.
So there were a couple instances where these divides would be laid very bare.
One was when – it was either him or the Young Turks.
I think it was him.
There was a shooting in a neighborhood where a very young black child gets killed by a
white shooter.
And they did a video about hate crimes and how hate crimes are on the rise between races and white people are evil and blah blah blah.
Not that, but white people are committing hate crimes against black people.
And I remember saying to him, I was like, hey, we don't have all the data yet for this.
It feels really bad to make videos about this beforehand because it's the same type of shit that happens at airports.
You know, is there a thing going on?
Was it a brown person? Are they Muslim?
It's Islamic extremism. We see this played out so many times in recent history, probably not a good idea to jump to conclusions.
And he's like, well, no, you don't understand.
Like, it's not that big a deal, whatever. And obviously, as the story goes, tale as old as time, the data comes out.
It was just an errant shot.
There was like gang violence, shot goes out of nowhere, hits a kid in the car.
It wasn't like a hate crime. The guy was trying to kill a kid.
But yeah, we basically we bump up against a few kind of political disagreements like this.
And an annoying thing is happening in my community where Hassan is like the serious political figure because he's from the Young Turks.
And I'm just kind of like, I do politics, but I also game.
And anytime I criticize Hassan, people are like, Destiny, you need to be more respectful.
He does this full time. If you're going to bring criticisms, you need to be like really well read and researched because he's got a, you know, more serious whatever, which I thought was ridiculous.
So by the way, if people don't know, he worked at the Young Turks, which is like the largest left-leaning YouTube channel probably.
At least at the time, yeah.
Okay. So, finally, he did a video on...
Skip ahead to some more minor disagreements.
He does a video on Kamala Harris.
He calls it Katmala Harris.
And it's like seven or eight horrible things about Kamala Harris.
And I'm like, okay, I know at least one or two of these things are not fully accurate, so I'm going to do all the research, I'm going to have all the sources, and we're going to have a long conversation about it so that now when I provide criticism to him, it's not going to be like this horrible, like, just me saying something flippantly or whatever.
It's going to be like substantial criticism.
So, I was on a plane ride, um...
JFK to Orlando, whatever, flying to Sweden to visit my wife.
And on the plane, I review all of the video, all the data, do all the research, and I write everything.
I'm just like, okay. I get to my wife's dad's house, and I'm at the table.
We're having a conversation like, hey, we should talk about the Kamala Harris stuff.
And he's like, okay, well, let's do it.
And we go over it, and...
I'll leave to the audience to watch the video.
Enough people have said this. I feel pretty confident in saying this.
I was pretty reasonable, pretty measured, pretty calm the whole time.
And I think he started to get increasingly irritated that I was levying more and more serious criticisms at the quality of work that he did.
Probably because he felt a little bit intimidated, I think, by my willingness to dive through political stuff.
There'd been a couple of awkward blowups where there was a show called The Raj Royale where sometimes politics would come up.
And Hassan would kind of try to explain something.
And there was another person one time on the show that made the joke.
It's like, instead of Hassan taking 10 minutes to explain this, can Destiny just come here and explain it in 30 seconds?
And he like exploded at that.
He got so fucking mad at that.
So yeah, I think that when I made that kind of call out or critique of him over the Kamala Harris stuff, he's probably feeling like increasingly irritated, threatened, agitated.
And then that's kind of what began the huge split from R. So you don't think you were a dick at all?
I don't think so in that conversation.
Especially given that, like, at that point, because this is still 2018 or 20, this might be 2019, I'm still known at that point as being very aggressive towards conservatives or alt-righters.
Oh, so this is like, oh, gotcha. Yeah, so, and with lefties is what I call them.
I think I'm being, like, very gentle.
Like, my conversational side with conservatives is like, you're a fuck!
You're so dumb. Like, that's how I'm, like, doing it.
So, like, with him, I'm like, well, don't you think that, like, this is, like, a little bit of, like, an inconsistent presentation about, like, I feel like it'd be nice.
But I always leave to the audience so they can go and watch that Kamala video, Kamala Harris video, Destiny's Son, if they think that I was being a dick.
But a lot of people watching said I was being pretty gentle, son.
Well, let me say, as a new fan of this space, I hope you guys make up and I hope you guys fight it out in the space of discourse and ideas.
Me too. And also with empathy, understanding what the strength of the other person is, what their buttons are, and there's an unspoken rule that you don't press the buttons that you don't need to.
Unless you're doing it mutually and it's fun because, you know, it's fun to piece each other off.
So that's kind of like what friends do.
You don't cross a certain line.
But then other than that, you fight it out.
Okay, let's step back. One other super interesting aspect of your worldview is you're a big supporter of Biden.
Can you explain what you love about Biden?
Do you love Biden more than Sean Carroll or less?
Sean Carroll is just like in another world of admiration.
I feel like I'm culturally appropriating you by saying gotcha now.
But it's so convenient.
It's an easy word. Now we're on the same wavelength, okay?
We're synchronizing. That's good.
I mean, it is really interesting because even the people that support Biden usually don't say they love, sort of, they don't support it strongly, you know?
So ideologically, philosophically, the reason why I like Biden is because he's really committed to this bringing the left and right together, which is something we so desperately need in the country.
And his, you know, statements over and over again of like, I'm not the Democrat president or the Republican president, I'm the president of the United States.
His desire to bring Republicans together to work on things like the infrastructure bill, that's So incredibly needed.
And I have a huge amount of respect and admiration for him for trying to push through on that message.
Do you think then it's unfortunate that he made that comment about MAGA? MAGA Republicans?
Yeah. I mean, I forget what the comment was, but it's MAGA Republicans are not good people kind of thing.
I watched the full video, and he's right.
There is this toxic aspect, and it's hard to call out because they're always going to be like, oh, he hates our Republicans.
He's not. If you watch the quote, he's very specifically calling out this group of people that think that the election was fraudulent.
Is it clear? That's what he meant by...
We can bring it up. All right.
This is... Oh, no. Uh-oh.
But I remember watching it on stream. It was like, if you said it, yeah, that's bad.
You can probably like YouTube MAGA, Republicans, Biden.
But it feels like it's pretty clear he's talking about the people that are election-denying.
Too much of what's happening in our country today is not normal.
Donald Trump and the MAGA Republicans represent an extremism that threatens the very foundations of our republic.
Now, I want to be very clear.
Very clear up front.
Not every Republican, not even the majority of Republicans are MAGA Republicans.
Not every Republican embraces their extreme ideology.
I know, because I've been able to work with these mainstream Republicans.
But there's no question that the Republican Party today is dominated, driven, and intimidated by Donald Trump and the MAGA Republicans.
And that is a threat to this country.
I disagree with that, man. He didn't clearly say extremist ideology.
He didn't say the people that doubt the validity of the election.
I mean, that's Donald Trump. No, but there's...
That's all the candidates that Donald Trump is supporting.
How many, what is it, like 40, 50?
How many candidates right now that are mega candidates are elected?
No, but there's, you know, 80 million or whatever people voted for Donald Trump.
You could say that's the MAGA Republicans.
So to me, it sounded like he was referring to not even the majority.
I mean, that's one nice, helpful clarifying.
But it's basically, there's the mainstream Republicans, and then there's those that voted for Donald Trump.
That's the way I heard it.
Okay. Maybe he should have done a better job at clarifying, but...
I feel like there's a clear, there is a huge problem with this group of Americans that think that the election is stolen.
I feel like that's what he's trying to call it. No matter if that's what he meant, even flirting with that line is not a person who's bringing people together.
I feel like extending a hand to the, like, most, I've worked with Republicans in Congress, not even a majority of Republicans are like this.
No, but why say not the majority of Republicans are like this?
Say, like, we're one country, we believe the same thing.
So, like, focus on the uniting part versus saying...
Maybe he does before and after. That was 50 seconds, okay?
But that, you never, the point is you never say something like that.
Listen, like that, you've spoken about the Bosnia speech, which is your favorite of his.
Yeah. I went back to it and listened to it.
Before I move to that, just on this, it's really hard for him to call out that group of election deniers, I think, without it always feeling like...
Well, why call them out? Because it's arguably one of the most destructive forces that exists in this country today.
Did it destroy anything?
They were trying to.
Did it, though? It didn't, did it?
So does that mean we don't call it out?
We wait till next time? No, because calling it out is giving fuel to the division.
Like, the people that doubted the validity of the election, that's anger, that's frustration with the other side.
You heal that as opposed to saying all those people that believed that at any time are idiots.
They're un-American.
I mean, they don't think the election was real.
I don't know if Biden has the ears of these people at all.
I don't know what he can do for...
There's people that believe the same thing in 2016 with the Russian hacking, right?
There's this... Hold on.
Yes. Yes. That is a super not fair comparison.
The mainstream Democrat opinion was that Russian intrusion in terms of social media and stuff happened, but there was never a claim that the election was stolen.
Or at least I don't know of any mainstream Democrat that supported that.
Donald Trump is not just saying there was interference and blah, blah, blah.
Donald Trump is literally saying the election was literally stolen, that ballot boxes were hidden, that vote tallies were manipulated.
I think the claim is there's a huge gulf of difference between the two.
So you can attack Donald Trump for that.
Yeah. I believe it's not the words of a uniter to attack people that believe that.
You could argue maybe it's okay, but especially not being super clear about that, about who you're referring to when you say MAGA Republicans.
Because MAGA is a hat and a slogan that refers to whatever the number is, 70 million people, whoever, that voted for Donald Trump.
Of all the Republicans that consider themselves MAGA Republicans, what percentage of them do you think believe the election was stolen?
I feel like that number is, I don't have the problem, but I feel like that number is probably more than 70%.
What's a MAGA Republican?
Maybe I'm not familiar. Like a Trump-supporting Republican, a MAGA Republican.
They're there for Trump. What's the difference between somebody that voted for Trump and a MAGA Republican?
So my mom is a MAGA Republican.
If Trump ran independently and DeSantis ran under the Republican ticket, my mom would vote for Trump.
She'll follow him to the end of the earth.
That's like a MAGA Republican. I think it's easy to mistake that distinction in these kinds of political speeches.
To me, anybody who voted for Trump can easily, in the context of the speech, be interpreted as a MAGA Republican.
Gotcha. I understand what you're saying.
Maybe he could have been more clear, but I think in listening to that, I think it's pretty obvious who he's talking about.
But I guess if you have an emotional response to it, I can understand the emotional response.
I don't have an emotional response.
I just don't like, I think I'm with, what is it, Michelle Obama.
They go low, we go high.
Meaning like, to me, a uniter doesn't participate in derision.
Okay. Sure, a uniter might not, but a leader has to be able to accurately assess the situation before him and make people aware of what's going on.
You mean all the impeachment trials, all the censoring from social media, all of that didn't do the job?
That's not his job.
I don't know about censoring any of that.
His job is to inspire a nation to unite a nation.
How can he do that when half the people don't believe that he was even legitimately elected?
Like, I think he's done a good job at working on legislation and doing stuff that hopefully benefits all Americans.
But I think it's important to recognize that, like, there is a contingent of Americans that don't even believe that, like, this is really crazy.
There is plenty of people that recognize that and are fighting that and are constantly screaming that from the rooftops.
His job... It's to be the inspiring figure that makes the majority of Americans be proud for him to be a president of the nation they love.
And that's what the uniting aspect is.
It's to remind people that we are one and we love this country.
We love the ideas that it represents.
It does that in other parts of that speech.
It's like a 20-minute speech, isn't it?
But that's a fuck-up.
You just don't participate in that division.
Anyway, I understand.
I understand. I just wanted to push back on the saying.
One of his strengths is that he's uniting.
But yes, that is an ideal, that is a goal, is a great one.
And he is one that espoused that goal for a long time.
Do you think, what else?
So from policy perspective and so on.
I thought the way he's handled Ukraine and everything thus far has been almost perfect.
I think he did a really good job at the political maneuvering and bringing other countries into the fold, at establishing clearly what our mission was in relation to Ukraine.
I thought he did a good job there. I admire him for pulling out of Afghanistan.
Even if it was a little bit rough around the edges, like we got out and we're gone.
No American lives are lost. The domestic policies passed more major legislation than I think anybody thought possible.
The green energy stuff with the last bill, the infrastructure bill, A lot of the coronavirus relief I thought was really good, especially the expansion of the child tax credit.
So from a policy perspective, foreign and domestic, I think he's been successful.
Rhetorically, I think he's generally been above board in terms of not attacking people or being too divisive.
He's trying to bring people together and work on them.
What do you think about the sort of popular in the media criticism of his mental decline?
Do you think he's experiencing mental decline?
You know, he's an old guy. But do you think...
Yeah, maybe a little bit, but he's still doing a good job, so, you know.
Not from a speech perspective, you mean from a policy perspective?
Yeah, I'm analyzing it as a job, yeah.
From a speech perspective, maybe not the greatest, but yeah, I mean, he's definitely, what is he, like 80, 81?
How old is he? I lose track after so many years.
Yeah. But you did say that he's probably going to run in 2024 and he's probably going to win.
Did I say that? That he's probably going to win?
No way did I say that. He's probably going to run.
Who knows who will win?
But I feel like the incumbent advantage is so strong.
Are you really going to throw that away? I think it's been like one or two times in history in the U.S. where the non-incumbent, the parties put somebody else up.
Yeah, I mean, the concern is like just the age and the mental decline, just the wear and tear of the campaign, all of that kind of stuff.
All of the speech you have to make, the debates and all that kind of stuff.
Yeah, I guess we'll see what happens. What?
The least excited...
I mean, two years from now is a long time.
In his current mental state, he could run and do it.
He could do a passable job. In two years, man, I don't know.
I've seen videos of Bill Clinton recently.
He's looking pretty rough. Yeah.
You know, if Biden is looking a lot more rough, worse for wear in two years, then maybe they actually do have to dig out another person for running.
Who knows? What do you think about Trump?
When he won in 2016, I think is when you came to fruition, politically speaking.
So what do you think his winning the 2016 election represents?
So for me...
The reason why I got into politics was Trump was like this new epistemic force in American politics that you kind of have to flirt with facts before, even if you wanted to be non-factual.
He super didn't care.
Lying was like a first language to him, just like in speaking in terms of the way that he used language to just say to you what he felt like you needed to hear to support him and not care at all about what is going on, about...
That's what Trump represented to me in terms of things that I cared about.
He also represents a lot more, obviously, that there was this undercurrent of American opinion that a lot of people didn't know still existed, and it did.
He got elected. That the Overton window was misidentified by even a large amount of the Republican Party.
That populism was a lot more popular than a lot of people figured, you know?
Yeah, there's a lot that I guess he represented.
Do you think Trump should have been banned from Twitter?
Can you make the case for and against it?
So you're a big supporter of free speech.
Yeah, so the case in favor of it...
Do you think he should be brought back?
Yeah, because if he gets brought back, there's a higher chance that I'll be brought back.
So I'm supporting that all the way.
Thank you, Elon. Unban my account.
So because you called me weak-spined, I'm going to have to message Elon.
Okay, at OmniDestiny.
It was a verified Twitter account.
OmniDestiny. No, no, I'm just kidding.
Why'd you get banned from Twitter, Destiny?
I don't know. I'll add that to Elon.
I saw that there was a screenshot of you referring to the rape of somebody.
Okay, that was on an older Twitter account, and that was a bad tweet.
You have multiple Twitter accounts, so you're trying to go around the bans that you keep getting.
Okay, hold on. You're slandering me a lot right now.
Let's get the facts straight.
I don't even remember why my first account got banned, but it was a wild account.
I tweeted some wildly inappropriate things.
Do you regret? I don't like that word.
I'm going to give the answer that most people give.
It's like, I don't regret it because I learned a lot.
So I'm glad I had the bad experiences that I did.
Why don't you like the word regret?
I think if we look at where we are...
How do you feel about determinism?
I believe in the hardest of determinism.
That's who I am, okay? Sure.
Who I am today is the culmination of everything that's occurred in the past.
I believe you speaking...
Sorry to interrupt. I believe in you...
Speaking about regret is a nice way to communicate that in this deterministic world, you've analyzed the acts of the past, and you're no longer that person.
Yeah, of course, for sure. That's what regret usually means.
Okay, thanks for giving me the human explanation.
Okay, true. So in that sense, there's a lot of things I've done that I regret.
Oh, what are you? You're not human?
You're a bot? NPC is my preferred name.
I wish I would have been smart enough at the time to not have to have had made those mistakes.
There you go. Good job.
But yeah, obviously really dumb, really crazy off-the-wall tweets.
But that account got banned. But then I made another account I can't believe I'm giving you a history of my Twitter accounts, but another account called OmniDestiny.
It's an honor. And that was my...
I got verified. I was cool.
They let me have that account because originally they banned it and I said appeal and I was like, oh, let me have one more.
And back then Twitter was cool and they're like, okay, go for it.
And that account lasts for a long time.
And I don't actually know 100% why that account got banned.
I believe that the tweet that showed up in the final, I got banned for hate speech.
And it was because I was, there was a picture that I tweeted with three different alt-righters that are kind of like neo-Nazi people.
And they were all like mixed race people.
And I said like, the new alt-right looks like a Disney Channel original movie.
In terms of racial composition.
And somehow they got flagged for instigating violence against minorities, I think.
I think that's the tweet that got me banned.
Because I think that's what showed up in the final report.
But I don't know. Maybe there were other reasons because nobody ever communicates.
But ever since that account went under, it's just been banivating ever since, so...
I'll ban evading ever since.
So all my new accounts I'm going to ban just get banned because they finally figure out it's me and then they ban evade.
There's like one dude at Twitter HQ who's like constantly looking for my new accounts and they get me.
Yeah. Anyway, yeah.
So post... Post-Trump world.
Do you think, okay, I mean this- Oh, should he be banned?
Oh, you asked me to make both cases.
Should he be banned? I mean, damn, dude, when you're tweeting out shit that's arguably leading to stuff like January 6th, I can understand why, because it's like, what else is this wild dude going to tweet out?
Like, is he going to start instigating other violent events?
So I'm sympathetic towards the like, okay, well, he can't just be here saying stuff like this.
That's insane. We're going to ban him.
Because it's instigating actual physical violence in the physical world.
Yeah, like, if I were to tweet stuff like that, I would get banned, probably.
On the flip side, this is the President of the United States.
It seems like he's, like, doing presidential decree by social media sometimes.
Like, is it really right that one public, or private, I should say, one private company can, like, erase the President of the United States' words from the eyes of a lot of Americans that are using these social media feeds?
And one big one, which I for sure am against, is the permanent ban.
Yeah, I don't like that. I hate that.
Even in my community. If somebody comes back over like a year, like, I mean...
Did you just compare yourself to the President of the United States?
No, I compared myself to Twitter banning the President of the United States.
Let me put it this way. If I banned Donald Trump in my chat room, I'd unban him in a year.
A year? Yeah.
What's the process for unbanning Donald Trump?
What would he have to do?
Usually people send me an email and they're like, listen, I did this stuff.
I'm sorry I was dumb. I'll give him another chance.
But a year? What if they send an email a month later?
Usually I'll unban them. That's usually my problem.
I ban pretty quickly in my community, but if you ever ask...
You're a big softie. Yeah, I usually let them back, yeah.
Well, because I used to be the worst type of internet person, and I think I'm a little bit better than I used to be.
Now that you're older. Yeah, now that I've matured, yeah, of course.
Age bestows a wisdom that just can't be gotten any other way.
What's your sense in general?
Is there something interesting you could say about your view on free speech?
It seems like one of those terms that's also overused to mean a lot of different things.
What does it mean to you? If you have a democratic style of governance, you are entrusting people with one of the most awesome and radical of responsibilities.
And that's saying that you're going to pick the people that are going to make some of the hardest decisions in all of human history.
If you're going to trust people to vote correctly, you have to be able to trust them to have open and honest dialogue with each other.
Whether that's Nazis or KKK people or whoever talking, you have to believe that your people are going to be able to rise above and make the correct determinations when they hear these types of speeches.
And if you're so worried that somebody's going to hear a certain political figure and they're going to be completely radicalized instantly, then what that tells me is that you don't have enough faith in humans for democracy to be a viable institution, which is fine.
You can be anti-democratic, but I don't think you can be pro-democracy and anti-free speech within reason.
Yeah. So what's the within reason?
I mean, you can't post like child porn or something on Twitter where people try to get you on that stuff.
Or like direct calls to violence are probably not—you shouldn't be tweeting out like, we're going to meet up tomorrow and go bomb, blah, blah, blah.
Probably not. So do you think it's okay to allow racism and anti-Semitism and hate speech— Hate speech, yes, because that can be very broadly defined.
I can understand there being some basic rules of, like, no slurs on, like, a platform that gets into, like, acceptable forms of moderation or, like, excessive harassment and bullying, I can understand.
But past that, when the moderation becomes ideological, I get a little bit nervous because, you know, there's a whole other...
Yeah, of course, it's all a gray area, but...
It feels like ideology has seeped into the censorship.
Not good. Yeah. It's so fascinating to think, especially now that Elon bought Twitter, how do you engineer a system that prevents ideology from seeping in and nevertheless is able to Create a platform that has healthy conversations.
Because if you have one guy who's just screaming nonsense nonstop, it has this effect where the quiet voices at the back of the room are silenced.
That's what you usually don't talk about.
If you let one annoying, loud person in, that's actually censoring the voice of a lot of people that would like to speak, but they don't get a chance.
That's one of the things, especially around, like, trans discourse, I have to constantly do that, like, reminder for my audiences of, like, when I'm dealing with these types of people on the internet, a lot of them might seem really crazy, a lot of these types of people might seem insane, but, like, in the real world, outside of, like, the crazy Twitter activist world, like, the vast majority of people you're meeting from LGBT communities are, like, the coolest, normalest people.
All they want is to, like, write to live their life in the way they want to and to be, like, unobstructed and, like, yeah.
But people will get this impression of, like, an online activist, like a vegan or LGBT person or whatever, Oh, is Melina coming over?
Oh yeah, I see. I don't know if that's her.
Okay, Melina just joined us.
What were we talking about?
Was it interesting? You were saying that you were going to talk to Elon about getting at OmniDestiny, the verified Twitter account unbanned.
That sounds like a lie.
That's so gracious of you. I can't even believe you would do that for me.
And then you admitted that you tried to evade the ban multiple times, which I'm sure would be very looked upon.
You know, I heard that in Norway, in their prison system, they don't actually punish you for trying to escape jail because that's like the natural human thing to do.
They hug you? I don't know if they, but they don't punish you because of course you're trying to be free.
That's all I'm trying to be on Twitter.
I'm just trying to be free. Oh, that's the natural humanistic.
Yeah, that's the natural. Of course, it's the banning event.
You're not a destructive force.
No, I'm a force for good.
That's why all my accounts only get banned for banning and banning.
I don't get banned for doing bad things.
And I'm a progressive shill.
I'm like far left. I love like progressive causes.
I thought this is what you criticized Sassan for being.
I show them from a place of first principles, not from a mindless AI echoing kind of thing, you know?
Okay. So you're a free-thinking bot.
Yeah, exactly. All right, cool.
Well, I'm sure we'll return to some politics.
That was beautiful. Malia, can you tell us about yourself?
You're also a fellow streamer.
Yes. What's your story? I stream and I started streaming because I met him, basically.
Kind of, but I don't do the politics.
I do like travels or talk about relationships, talk to my audience basically.
And you're from that part of the world, right?
Sweden. Yeah, exactly. So did you escape from prison and they didn't?
Norway. You just mentioned Norway.
It's different? It's a different way.
I've been to Sweden a bunch of times.
I love it. There's a tech sector there that's really flourishing.
Where did you go? Which city?
I went to Stockholm. I think I gave a few lectures there.
There's a vibrant tech sector.
It was cool. And people are super nice.
Yeah. We're friendly.
We're not very deep.
We don't really have much deep conversation.
It's like a meta conversation. Oh, there's not many intellectuals that come from Sweden?
We don't really speak very highly of ourselves.
We kind of like just chill all the time.
We don't make a scene. We don't, we're just like, you know.
Do you know what the name for that is?
There's a specific name for it.
Jantelagen. Yeah, Jantelagen.
Oh, there's a philosophy behind it.
When you're part of like Sweden or Norway, you like, you don't talk too highly of yourself because it's seen as kind of like rude.
Like think of like America except the exact opposite.
You don't even really want to like, you don't want to make yourself into a victim too much.
You don't want to be too much of anything.
You're just like sticking to the group.
Don't make a big scene about yourself.
But that said, you came here and you put yourself in front of a camera and became a streamer.
Do you understand how weird that is for my friends in Sweden?
Do you have anxiety? I just didn't talk about myself and just make a big deal about myself for hours every day.
Was that terrifying? Did you have anxiety about that?
No, because I don't see them.
But then I come back and I'm like, ooh.
Also, what do you feel like when you're actually streaming?
You feel like you're just alone in a room?
Like one-on-one type thing?
No, I see Chad and I'm thinking, oh, they're like little fairies.
They're not really real. They're just like out there.
I don't know what they look like. I just see little names and they're just cute and just colors, you know?
You're talking to little fairies inside your head.
Yeah, that's what I do. Is that how you feel about Chad?
They're demons for me. They're demons?
Okay, I might end up fairies.
Yeah. So is chat a source of stress or happiness?
No, for me, it's a source of happiness.
I've been very intentional with the construction of my community, so I'm really happy with where it's at.
How are you able to actually have deep political discourse while playing a video game at the same time?
I have a really good chat room in terms of the way that people engage in conversations.
I was one of the earliest people to embrace the philosophy of I am in total control of what people watch me think, that I have a high level of responsibility for how they conduct themselves, and that if I conduct myself in a certain way, I can expect a certain level of conduct from them.
And for the most part, it's worked pretty well for the past nine or ten years, yeah.
What about the actual playing of the game?
Like, you're able to parallelize the brain, like...
Oh! Like, it seems, like, Factorio seems like a super complex game.
Yeah, I don't actually think that's possible.
I don't think multitasking for a human brain is possible.
If you see me playing a game, usually what's happening is the conversation is like, I've had it a million times, so I'm not thinking about it, I've automated that.
Or, if the conversation is very challenging, then if you watch me, if you really watch what's happening in the game, I'm probably just running around in circles, because I have to think about the conversation.
Okay. Because with Factorio, it looks like a lot of stuff is going on.
Sometimes, yeah. So, it's hard for a person who hasn't played the game to detect that you're not actually...
Does that come off as, like, you're super intelligent and multitask?
Or does it come off as, like, he's not interested in this conversation at all?
Yeah. Yeah, there's a coolness to it, like, when you're not paying attention.
Like... If you're looking elsewhere, like you're checking your phone, you're too cool for this conversation.
There is a sense like that. Yeah. The reality is, though, is if you watch...
It was easier to see in Minecraft because in Minecraft, when there was a challenging conversation, if you watch me play, I'm literally just running around and jumping in circles because I have to think about the conversation 100%.
I can't do a complicated task and think about the conversation.
Or like the people always joke in my chat, like, oh, no, the notepad came out.
If it's a really challenging conversation, I'll get rid of the game and I'll bring out a notepad and I'll start writing stuff down to keep track of what's going on.
Yeah. So, what kind of stuff do you stream?
So, advice? Yeah, like, either I talk to chat or I travel around, basically.
Like, have conversations or we, like, go to countries.
I've been to, like, Italy.
I was in Italy for, like, one and a half months just, like, traveling around alone.
Going to cities, like, having, like, my camera with me and, like, streaming for hours.
Where's the coolest place you've been to?
Ever? It's probably New Zealand.
New Zealand? I think so.
After it's probably going to be Italy, I think.
So like history and...
Oh, so both history, because New Zealand is also beautiful.
So it's both natural beauty and historical beauty.
Yeah, for sure.
I think I just really like the Polynesian sort of culture.
I think it's very interesting. Like the ocean people.
And it's just really beautiful.
People are very relaxed, chill.
They're very far away, which is interesting as well.
Because whenever they talk about politics or they talk about the world, it feels really far away.
So where's home for you?
Is Austin home? It's home for me.
So a human being is home?
Yeah. We've lived in a lot of different places and traveled around.
So that's what you think of home as like...
I think so.
Yeah. I mean, if they're going to be a place, it's probably going to be like my childhood places, probably.
Yeah. Like my old country house or something like that.
We don't have it anymore, but that's like home for me, I guess.
So how'd you guys meet each other?
You're currently married.
Yes. To each other, yeah?
To each other. Just making sure we're on the same page.
Alright, cool. How'd you guys meet?
I was watching his YouTube stuff in 2018, I think, because it was the Swedish election around that time and I was interested in politics.
And then I think he said in one of his videos that he had an Instagram and that he needed people to stop DMing him.
That wasn't cutie pies.
And then I messaged him and said, am I a cutie pie?
And then you replied in like two minutes.
And then that's when I was in New Zealand.
And I guess you wanted to escape America or like LA for a little bit.
And then flew to New Zealand.
Where were you mentally there?
Because we've talked through this timeline.
Where's 2018? Was it 18, 19...
Where was the low point?
That was way earlier. Low point carbon cleaning.
That was like 2010.
2018 was probably your peak.
Every day now is my peak.
What do you mean? That was my peak.
Why would you say that? Nobody ever had missed being past their prime.
It was probably around the time where you were getting a lot of lefties through your community and you were really thinking about that they would go too far.
Maybe. I think that was still when Hasan and Vash were both in my community.
Exactly. So I would say it feels like there was not really, like, much issues when it comes to, like, to your stuff or, like, your work stuff back then.
Oh, something we didn't talk about is that, like, there were no politics on Twitch.
I exclusively inhabited that place for, like, two years because nobody else did it because it was a really toxic environment for politics.
So for a couple of years as it grew, like, I kind of grew the whole space because nobody was doing it yet.
What did that look like? You're having...
Like political debates, political discourse.
Yeah, mainly like going into YouTube people to try to argue with them or just doing politics on stream, like reading stories, researching stuff, talking about stuff.
But there's not like other people on Twitch to debate about politics because there was no politics.
It was, yeah. Was there a debate in the space of communism, socialism, social democrats, kind of like this?
Are you trying to outline your own position during that time?
I think it was mainly me fighting against conservatives because it was like Trump stuff.
And then it was coming off the back of like, there was this movement called Gamergate.
And there was all this anti-SJW stuff on the internet.
And I was like the SJW, like the progressive that was fighting on the progressive side of things.
So I think that's what I was known for. But I was fighting with people off of Twitch because on Twitch, there weren't very many political discussions happening.
So you were holding the SJW flag.
Yeah. To what degree do you still hold it?
Like, what's the best? What's the steel man case for SJW? I mean, like, I'm still very much that SJW from 2018, 2019, but the positions have moved so much farther left that some people may not call me that anymore.
I'm not sure. It depends on who I'm talking to.
So basically, what is social justice?
Like, being sensitive to the experience of others?
Yeah, being sensitive and empathetic towards the experience of others and then trying to build a better world that, like, suits as many different types of people as possible while being, like, aware of, like, their needs.
Okay. So you guys met, from your perspective, is she telling lies?
Is it accurate? No, it's pretty accurate.
Okay, when did you guys actually meet?
I flew out in 2019.
Yeah, basically there's like weird stuff happening in LA. I just come off of kind of a weird not kind of sort of relationship and I just wanted to like go away for a while.
Another company reached out to me and they had like a fun streaming device and they said they'd sponsor a trip if I went somewhere and I was like, oh, well, I know this person.
I know a couple people in New Zealand.
Melina is one of them. It's like, I'll go to New Zealand.
It'll be fun. And yeah, I did that for two weeks.
Do you guys believe in love?
I feel like you lack the gotcha, got us into this.
I'm not sure the degree to which you have human emotions.
I have quite a few. Okay.
From your perspective, when did you fall in love with Malie?
When did you fall in love with Malie Mel? The minute I saw her.
I don't know. Our first two weeks together were a lot of fun.
We had a lot of chemistry in person.
Yeah. I was kind of shocked.
I wasn't thinking about it.
Because it was like we spent like a week together and you said, I really want to tell you something.
And you were like stalling that for the longest time.
I think she was... Oh, he said like, I love you?
No, he basically just said like, I really like you and it never really happens.
That's what he said. And I was like, oh.
And I thought, hey, I thought.
So let's still run. We said Trump getting banned from Twitter.
Is that what we were talking about before? Yeah.
Oh, yeah. Hey, you agreed to me coming on here.
Of course I'm going to be doing this to you.
So how long did that take? Two weeks, you said?
That took like a week. No, I don't know.
I think it was just like... The thing is, my mind processes information so quickly.
Two weeks to somebody like you is actually like years for me.
Yeah, so there was a lot of factorial type of strategic thinking.
Yeah, going on. I was seeing, like, all the events.
Like, Doctor Strange or whatever in the Avengers when he's, like, seeing into all the futures.
Also, when you saw me, you just saw the future.
Yeah, I was looking at all of them, yeah.
You're doing, like, some game theoretic simulation of all the possible outcomes?
Yeah, exactly. Okay.
But no, yeah, it was probably pretty soon I realized that we had a lot of chemistry.
Yeah. I think before I left after my two weeks there, I was like, we need to make sure you get, like, a ticket to come visit me in the United States because it'll be fun and everything.
And then I kind of decided that last minute, too.
It was, like, really, like, five hours before your flight back.
We kind of realized. Because it was kind of like men is just like a one-time thing and then that was it.
But we're like, oh no, this is a lot of fun.
We should probably hang out again. Oh, so you realized you would miss each other.
Yeah. Yeah. The melancholy side of love.
Okay, when did you fall in love with Steven?
I thought he, like, hated me.
I don't know. I thought... Not hated me.
She still thinks I hate her. No.
No, I remember, like, when he said that he really liked me, I was a little shocked about that.
Because I... I don't know.
There was a lot of, like, random things happening in New Zealand.
It was a lot of fun. But it was definitely, like, very interesting, like, things that happened.
Because I was, like, around a lot of other people as well.
So I thought he might have had, like, a really bad time.
But when he said that, I was thinking about it more.
And then we spent, like...
More time together, like, a week after that, and it felt like that was more, like, real.
And I think when he was about to leave, I kind of realized, like, no, I really like him.
Do you guys ever say love to each other?
Like, I love you? Yeah, of course.
Why would you ask that?
What has he said before? Because I haven't, I don't think I've heard you speak.
The only time I've heard Steele talk about love is when you're, like, criticizing the red pill community, saying they don't ever talk about love in relationships.
Almost all the time I'm giving criticism to people, like I said, I'm kind of stepping in.
I'm very disconnected from my own emotional experience because I'm trying to talk within there, so it's pretty rare that I'll talk about mine.
What is your own emotional experience exactly?
Highly blunted, I guess.
There's a lot, okay. What does that mean?
I mean, what's deep in there?
Is this just who you are genetically or are you running from something?
I think I have a pretty good understanding of myself.
A lot of people make that accusation of me, but I don't think I am.
Okay. This is just who you are?
It's just who I am, yeah. Okay.
This is not childhood stuff, like trauma?
It's all sorted and done.
You figured it all out?
Yeah. In your old age?
As I grow, every year I figure out more and more, yeah.
He did mention, I think I heard this somewhere, that this is a source of fights for the two of you, the age thing.
I felt the ageism throughout this whole conversation.
He's basically... He's saying that he gambles with time.
He's just like, I think she will be good later.
And then just like... It's like an investment, yeah.
Yeah. It's like what he's doing.
When this treasury bond matures, I'm going to be able to cash out for a good...
What do you think so far? Is the stocks going up or...
It's tumultuous.
What's that mean? It's like Bitcoin?
Yeah, like Bitcoin.
Crypto, Mel. Alright.
If you guys don't mind, one interesting aspect of your relationship is you're in an open relationship.
What's that like?
From a game theoretic simulation perspective, what went into that calculation?
And how does that...
Like how that started? Yeah, how that started, sure.
The only relationships I've ever done has been open relationships since I was in high school because I didn't really understand why wouldn't you be able to do other things with other people but then just have your main partner basically.
So what is an open relationship generally speaking?
That means you have one main partner?
Not a monogamous relationship.
You're somehow allowed in different ways.
You can see other people sexually.
Sexually, but there's one main station.
It doesn't have to be there for some people, but I think it's probably easier and we probably don't really have time or the energy for more than one person to really...
What about like emotional?
It's really complicated.
There's a lot of complicated stuff going on under the hood there.
Yeah. I think broadly speaking, you've got like polyamorous relationships and you've got like open relationships where polyamorous is like, oh, I've got like three different girlfriends and we all hang out or sometimes even live together or three boyfriends or whatever.
And then you've got like open relationships, which is like, oh, you know, like you can basically hook up with other people and then you've got like your main relationship and that's it.
I think ours is probably somewhere in the middle of that.
In the middle, yeah. To where we've got long-term friends, some of them we hook up with, and that's kind of how we...
It's a delicate dance that explodes every six months on itself.
So it does explode? You guys fight over it?
We fight over some things, yeah.
Things happen, yeah. I think it's mostly because a lot of people can't handle it, and they agree to something, and then they realize that we're way too cool, and then they get really obsessed, and they think that they can get in there, and then it gets really dramatic.
Have you figured it out?
Like... I feel like we figure out things more and more when it comes to what's a good person for us to hang out and what's not a good person for us to hang out with.
I probably have more opinions on who he hangs out with because he likes the fucking psychos.
He likes the crazy ones, like the baby trap sort of women.
And I don't like that because that affects me.
Yeah. That affects your game theoretical.
Obviously, yeah. Right. You like to surround yourself, like, in general, you've talked about, with crazy people.
I say crazy, and I really shouldn't.
It's a humorous way. It's like, yeah.
They're very unstable. Very, can be unstable, but people that are very unique.
Like, when I meet this person, that's like...
Not boring. Yeah, not boring.
Yeah. And you said that you're progressively becoming not boring yourself.
No, I think I'm pretty stable.
I don't let them affect me much, but...
So you don't think they affect your...
No. If I've said that, I've said it jokingly.
I think I've got my stuff really well figured out.
It's what allows me to engage with people like this so easily because I can engage, I can make them feel seen and heard, and then if it gets insane, I can cut off and I can be chill.
Very few things affect me in the long term.
Do you guys experience jealousy?
Usually, whenever I feel like he's not spending the amount of time that I'm asking for and he spends it on his video games or his stream or he sees someone else more than he sees me or something like that, that would not be good.
Because then it affects our relationship.
Do you have a good sense of, like, is it literally time or is it the energy put into the...
It's probably, like, if he's with me, that, like, the attention in the time, like, when he hangs out with me, and then there's also probably the time.
So if I feel like something else is distracting too much, like, it could be work or it could be a friend or it could be anything.
Like, if I feel like it starts to take away from, like, me, then I'm having an issue with it.
I don't think he really cares much.
I guess the only jealousy you experience is probably when you feel like...
Yeah. Yeah.
Yeah. I think we are, like, diametrically opposed sometimes in terms of how we view, like, engagement with people or engagement with the world sometimes.
So, like, on her end of the spectrum, like, a perfect week for her might be, like, being in a cabin, watching, like, fireflies at night, going hiking every morning, going swimming at the beach, because it's, like, you're taking in, like, the grandeur of nature.
You're, like, connected with yourself.
You're, like, very at peace.
Everything is, like, chill and cool.
There's the wind, the feeling of nature, everything.
That's, like, her peak living experience.
And, like, being present. Yeah.
And, like, my peak experiences are, like, people trying to destroy my life, like, the challenge of, like, navigating a really complicated discussion, like, you know, several different dramatic events unfolding that might end my career.
Like, these things are, like, very... I like the stress and the action and the entertainment and everything is, like, very cool for me.
So when we're together, she generally wants me to be, like, more chill.
But if I don't feel like I'm being, like, stimulated a lot, then it's easy for, like, my mind to wander.
To wander somewhere else. That's kind of the issue.
We have a very different way of, like, engaging with...
So how can you find happiness in the stillness I feel like if we're just aware of it and we're trying our best whenever we're supposed to do this one thing.
So let's say that we want to go to New York and I'm like, we should just go out and do this one specific thing.
We try to find something that he enjoys doing.
Now that we're in Texas, we can go shooting or do something fun that he enjoys, then we can do it.
And then I think like...
Just for me also to be aware that when he spends lots of time on crazy people, it's not because he loves them or wants to be with them.
It's just because he likes having his life destroyed, like you said, which I don't really do.
It's a completely different thing.
So for me to understand more how he's thinking, because it's so different from mine, and for him to understand how I'm thinking about things and what I prioritize in my life, I think that's how we navigate.
But I think it's good. I think the differences can be good when we're finding a way.
Well, I think you're relatable.
I'm more of a human. No, I'm definitely very difficult to get along with.
Like, I always tell people that, that, like, if you're dating me for, like, more than a few years, like, you get, like, an award for that.
It's like a war zone that you've survived.
That's what you say. Absolutely. You're, like, a veteran.
You get medals and stuff. And it's always, like, I think there's probably been, like, six different, I don't think she says it anymore, but there are, like, six different times in our relationship where she's like, is it always like this?
Is this actually like this? You lied in the beginning about that.
You were lying about that.
You were like, right now I'm having a huge argument online about seeing the N-word in private.
It's just going to be like this and I'm going to be streaming 24 hours a day.
And I'm like, when are you going to come to bed?
It's been a week. Did playing League come into this?
A little bit, but I'm clean.
I'm clean of League like six months right now.
What do you hate about League?
The humans. Well, speaking of which, my participation in League involved on the robot side.
Good. That's an improvement.
Because both with StarCraft II and League of Legends, because OpenAI and DeepMind both participated in creating bots in those.
I was a professional StarCraft 2 player, so I remember when the AI started to play.
It's interesting the types of restrictions that you would have to put on a gaming robot to make it functional and not totally unfair to the other side.
Yeah, to make it human-like.
Was that interesting to you, to see AI be able to play those video games?
I think in some ways people think things are more complicated than they actually are.
And I think video games is one of those things where we're like, oh my god, there's like a million possibilities at every second and who knows.
And it's like, no, there's like three or four things going on at any point in time.
And I'm willing to bet that like an AI could probably solve some of these games like pretty easily, especially if there are no constraints on how they can learn.
Can I talk to you about relationships?
Yeah, we already have.
Yeah, I know. But more generally speaking, we didn't get a chance to talk about the Red Pill community.
Oh, sure. Well, first of all, what is the Red Pill community, the manosphere in general?
I'd love to get both of your opinions on this.
Sure. I know you're probably not as opinionated on that phone.
Do you think I am that?
Probably not as much as you, but I do have opinions as well.
You do? Okay. I usually don't speak out too much on it because I feel like there's a language barrier.
That's why I don't really do politics because this is my second language.
That's right. You have to know how to use derogatory terms every other sentence so they understand you, right?
Exactly. I don't know anything about that.
You need to be able to speak really well for people to take you seriously.
I think. And, like, that's the thing.
Like, if I don't have, like, the words and I don't have the, like, I can't pronounce things correctly, then people are not going to say...
Yeah, and I guess all person searching for words looks stupid, essentially.
That's how people view it, yeah. Tell me about it.
I have a podcast that a bunch of people listen to and I mumble and they, yeah.
Wait, what's your first language?
Russian. Oh, okay.
But I speak both languages horribly.
I'm just not, I'm not like, there's definitely a big disconnect between my brain and my mouth module.
Like, I'm not able to generate the thoughts efficiently.
Like, the things you're able to do, like, da-da-da-da-da, like, speak like that, I'm not.
It's very, very tough.
Plus, there's a huge amount of anxiety and social interaction that I have, which makes speaking even harder.
Gotcha. Yeah.
Yeah. Yeah. It's tough.
I understand it. Gotcha. Makes sense.
Yeah. The gotcha is both a symbol of compassion and derision at once.
I'm just letting you know I understand what you're saying.
I'm just going to sit there and stare at you.
Confirm. No, you can just say like, yeah, I get it.
Yeah, I get it.
Gotcha. Gotcha.
No, it's so short.
I got you. Gotcha.
Say a longer sentence, but that means the same thing.
I understand you.
Yeah, that's good. That's like, not chills, you know?
You get chills, although you understand me.
Yeah, it feels good. Yeah.
I hear you. I hear you.
And like, if you just like hold the other person's hand, that's even better.
You gotta put in some emotion there, okay?
Show that you have some. I understand.
What do you think about...
Gotcha. What do you think about Red Pill?
Sorry, what is it, first of all, for people who don't know?
Yeah, the red pill community, obviously it's the Matrix reference.
The red pill that you take is when you realize what dating standards and norms really are in the world, that men are providers and have to become some great thing to hunt and attract, you know, the women who are just kind of there floating around looking for people to give them the most resources.
And it's like coming to a realization of what the world of dating really is, broken away from the Hollywood standards and the romantic stuff that they try to sell you in, you know, stores.
So there was kind of Maybe you can kind of educate me on this, but red pill used to be associated with just...
Maybe anti-establishment views?
I don't know. Maybe Republican conservative viewpoints?
Maybe alt-right? Yeah, they use red pill a lot in different communities.
When you say the red pill community...
Yeah, that usually means dating.
The dating thing. But a lot of people say, oh, Trump voters, they're red-pilled.
Are you red-pilled on politics or whatever?
People say stuff like that, yeah. Okay.
Cool. And then there's the manosphere, all the similar type of stuff.
And Andrew Tate is somebody that represents kind of the figurehead?
Of the manosphere, of the red pill stuff, yeah, I would say so.
I'm pretty sure, yeah. Okay. Alright, cool.
So what are some ideas that they represent and what do you think about them?
I think they do a good job at speaking to disaffected young men who feel like the rest of the world has kind of left them behind or isn't willing to speak to them.
And they do identify some true and real problems.
Feels like on the left we have a really hard time doing like self-improvement or telling people how to better themselves.
We focus too much on like structural or systemic issues rather than what can an individual do to uplift or empower themselves.
And it also feels like they do a good job at speaking to some of the positive aspects of masculinity, that it's okay to be like strong and brave and a soldier and a warrior and provide for your family and blah, blah, blah.
So I would say like those are like positive messages, like self-improvement and everything that come from the red pill community.
What's the negative? I think the analysis on how men and women interact is way too transactional.
All of the romanticism and love and chemistry is totally sucked out of it.
Everything is very sex-based.
How do you basically have sex with the most amount of women possible?
And that's going to make you happy. And then I think people's motivations sometimes are just spoken about in such a shallow, derogatory way that I don't think is always reflective of reality.
A woman only wants you because you make six figures and you're tall, and a guy only wants you because he wants to have sex with you.
It feels like there's a lot of that going on a lot.
Yeah, and that misses some fundamental aspect about relationships, about meaningful relationships and so on.
I've never heard red pill people ever, ever talk about meaningful relationships.
It's always just how to get in one or how to have sex, really.
Mel, what bothers you about some of that philosophy?
I feel like the people that are the red pill people, I feel like their solution is something that doesn't actually work out.
It works out for some people.
People that make a lot of money are really successful in that sort of way.
But it's not going to help most men out there.
So I feel like it's just a pointless speech to give to these really lost guys.
And they really do believe that they can...
They can become successful.
They can get money.
And when they get all these things, they can get girls.
But most of them is not going to achieve that ever.
To get the money part or become successful.
Just become a billionaire, you know?
And you'll get all the girls, which is true, but not everyone can do that.
So I feel like when these guys are speaking to these men and they're just like, we just care about these men out there.
You know, they need to hear this.
It doesn't really help a lot of them.
And it doesn't inspire them to develop compassion towards the opposite sex, which is probably something required to have a meaningful relationship.
And also, like, they seem to complain a lot about women, like only wanting men that have money and
that's tall and that's muscular, whatever, you know, all those things. But they complain about
that, but that's like also kind of what they're trying to make the men try to do for themselves.
So they kind of like fall into the same sort of behavior.
And it seems like they're kind of unaware of that as well. They're just playing a part of the
game instead of trying to find a woman that doesn't look for those things and that are
looking for not those things. Yeah.
I actually would love to have, like, straight-up data on people in that world versus not in that world, how often they get laid.
Like, literally, so I think for sure people in that world have fewer meaningful long-term relationships that are fulfilling, that actually help them succeed in life, that help them be happy and content and all that kind of stuff.
But just even the straight-up, the shallow goal of getting laid, I wonder.
Because it's very possible that just the roughness with which they treat intellectually women, that might lead to lower success, not higher success.
It's very adversarial, which I think is always disappointing.
Anything that talks about men and women, I think it's good to acknowledge differences, but when it becomes adversarial, especially when you talk about sex, sex is something that men are getting, and it's something that women are giving, and that type of trade-off in the way they talk about it is like, yeah, it sets people against each other in a really toxic way, I think.
How do you talk to people from that world, from the red pill world?
Would you ever talk to somebody like Andrew Tate?
Oh, yeah, if I had the chance to.
I've been on the Fresh and Fit podcast a few times, and then I've got a friend, Sneko, who's very red pill, that stuff.
If I'm trying to talk to them, usually it's kind of like approaching a scared cat.
The first thing you have to do is be very gentle and say, I understand your issues.
I understand your complaints. I know that I'm scary because you think I'm going to say toxic masculinity and feminism and all these scary words at you.
So the first thing is always to recognize it.
A lot of what they talk about, there are true aspects to what they're talking about that people on the left won't recognize.
I think it's good to acknowledge those things that men and women are kind of different.
We do look for different things in general when it comes to relationships.
It's okay to say that. There's nothing bad there.
And then it'll usually be like, once I've got your trust and I'm in your bubble, let's talk about the things that you want and maybe some of the strategies that you're employing aren't necessarily going to get you some of the things that you want.
So for instance, if you're really worried about shallow girls ruining your life, like Melina said, It's probably not best to build your entire worldview around trying to get shallow girls that are going to ruin your life.
Like, if your way of attracting a girl is to go to the gym, get a whole bunch of money, and try to, like, flaunt your wealth as much as possible, you're going to be attracting the very same type of women that you're here, like, decrying on your stream.
I think we talked about that on the podcast.
Like, you probably want to have a woman that's going to be there if you lose your job, but still there.
Like, that cares about the things that's not just your job.
Yeah. It's more stable.
And also, I don't help you become a great man or grow.
I feel like a great friendship and a partnership.
It helps make you a better person.
Some of the most successful people I know, I mean, they have families and there's clearly a dynamic there that makes them, they wouldn't be that without...
They're not an island, yeah. Yeah, and the kids actually are a big part of that too.
Like for most people, if you're like a good parent, they make you step up somehow in life.
You have to take responsibility for getting your shit together and excelling in ways that I guess the philosophy of the Red Bull does not quite get to.
That's always interesting. I think I've asked that a couple times where it's like, would you let your daughter date Andrew Tate?
And it's always funny to watch them kind of like squirm around those answers sometimes.
But see, if they don't have a daughter, like, you know, I don't have a daughter, I think your whole philosophy changes once you have a daughter.
Sure. Well, but even at that, like, they know that what they're answering, they feel a little bit weird about it.
It's funny to watch them. Like, even they know, it's like, ah, fuck, you know?
Well, they might say, like, I want my daughter to date, like, a high-value male.
To the degree that he's a high-value male, yes.
But, like, I don't think you'll feel that way.
The definition of high-value changes completely.
For sure. Certainly the stereotypical...
Measures of value contribute to the calculation, but it's so much more than that, I think.
The chemistry of the whole thing is bigger.
You've also mentioned about body count.
You guys both have a high body count.
Does body count matter?
Or it depends. Like you said, it's low in some people's eyes.
It's high in other people's eyes.
Does body count matter in relationships?
Does the past matter? Well, the past matters.
I don't think body count. Not to me, I don't really care.
Not just as it is, no.
Yeah. I mean, it could be.
The past does. Yeah. Well, the past is who you are, right?
If somebody tells me they have a 200 body count and they're 16, something's probably going on there that's not good.
I was thinking about that too. Because it could be really young people that are having some sort of mental problems going on.
Or somebody's like 45 and they've never had sex before.
There's probably something going on, right?
So it could be indicative. But if somebody's in their 20s and they've had sex with 100 people or 50 people or whatever, it's whatever.
There's more experience, which can be good.
Sure. Okay, so that just represents you're like sexually open and so it doesn't really necessarily mean any kind of...
Not necessarily. It could though.
The number alone doesn't mean anything.
Yeah. Okay.
Well, you could meet a guy that's like, I just really, really want to fuck a lot of people because it makes me so cool.
You could meet someone like that.
So the body count doesn't matter, but where it comes from.
Yeah, like why have you slept with the people you slept with?
Does it hurt the romantic aspect of the relationship, knowing that there's a lot of people in the past?
I don't know. Not for us, no.
Is the part of the relationship fundamentally romantic?
For us? Yeah, I'd say so.
Okay. What?
You come off as such a cold person.
No, I was just in my head thinking I wanted to just say gotcha right there.
Oh, nice. It's so judgmental.
I think when it comes to the sex thing, there's always like, the way that I explain it is, and I understand like, I have to say this because I don't advocate for what I do for everybody or what she does for everybody because obviously there's a whole bunch of We're good to go.
So, like, the idea of, like, oh, wow, I had sex with a person that was so special doesn't mean as much as, like, you know, us traveling to, like, New Zealand or sharing some special moment doing, like, some really fun activity or event or whatever.
That's usually how I like it, yeah.
So a shared intimate moment.
Yeah. I kind of agree, but I can definitely connect the romance with sex.
Boring. I'm curious why you can't do that.
We've also talked about misogyny, which is clearly the embodiment of that.
What were you saying? There's a connection between romance and sex?
Yeah, I think it is.
Because I think sex could be a lot of things.
It's some sort of bonding, I'd say, in some way.
Let's say that you really like BDSM. You become submissive to someone or you take control over someone.
It's a very bonding, intimate moment, I'd say.
And that's romantic. The intimacy is romantic.
I think it is. If you can show yourself as really submissive or like weak or you have like absolutely no control over yourself and you let someone else do it or you are the one being that like you are the dominant for someone I think that's a really like intimate thing because you show like the weakest part of yourself kind of.
I just feel like I personally to me some component of romantic but to me this is not judging to others to me maybe it's how I was brought up The romance increases if the number of intimate interactions are limited to one person.
For me, for some reason, spreading it out It decreases, like, exponentially the feeling of romance you feel.
I don't know what... That could be just, like, sort of having grown up in the Soviet Union.
There's a kind of... There's the fairy tale stories.
And you're kind of maybe living through them.
Yeah, I mean, I think what you're saying is, like, really normal.
Like, most people probably feel that way, yeah.
But because you guys are able to successfully not do that, I just want to question my own understanding of it, you know?
Like... Like, why is that?
Why is that? Why am I being very jealous for no reason?
Like, maybe you can maximize the number of intimate experiences if you just open up and let go of jealousy, essentially.
I feel like in Sweden, like in Scandinavia, we're extremely just sexually open.
Like, in general. We're not, like, super religious either.
We're very, like, relaxed.
We don't feel bad about ourselves.
It's just, like, a different sort of thing.
And I would say, like, we're more progressive when it comes to feminism and stuff.
So, it's more common they will meet women with a higher body count than, like, when I meet, like, American girls.
All of them have, like, vaginismus, like, super suppressed, like, sexually.
What did you just use?
They have, like, issues to, like, they can't relax during sex, so it just hurts for them.
Vaginismus. Vaginismus.
Isn't that what it's called? Yeah. um so like I meet so many girls that are having like a lot of issues with sex and they have like a very low body count because they just can't relax or they yeah and it's probably and usually they come from like a very religious background um so they have just been told like you cannot wear that you cannot be like that you can't like you know and like where I grew up it wasn't like that at all we just see it as more like a casual thing So then you can just maximize the awesomeness of the experience.
Yeah, I guess. You don't have trauma over it.
Exactly. I think the important thing I think for everybody to realize is there's always pros and cons to everything.
Like my lifestyle, like obviously I get to have a lot of fun experiences.
That's like a huge pro and that's super cool.
And if you're like a more monogamy-brained person, you're not going to get those experiences.
But if you're a monogamy-brained person, like when you're sharing that special moment in time with somebody else, like that moment can be really, really, really special.
Because now it's the thing that you're showing yourself and opening yourself up to another person and they're only trusting you to do that.
And that's, like, a really special thing that only the two of you are sharing with each other.
So, I mean, like, there's always, like, pros and cons to everything.
Like, I think we both would say, like, doing an open relationship is probably not, like, we would not recommend it.
Yeah, no, of course not. I don't think we would, no.
Yeah, I recently fasted for three days and I ate a chicken breast at the end of that and it was like the most delicious food I've ever eaten.
True. So like there's some aspect of fasting and scarcity and so on that like and you have to figure out what for your own psyche what works the best.
It's good to be a little bored or like not do something or like work because you can just enjoy the time when you're doing something really fun.
It's more fun otherwise you're just gonna get numb in general with everything.
Yeah. Yeah, I personally just never get bored.
Like, I guess the boring thing is exciting to me.
You're like me, because everything I like is boring.
I gotta ask you, we talked about misogyny, and he's trying to battle it out on the internet.
What's your sense as a woman about the level of misogyny on the internet, in the streaming community, and how to fight it?
For me, I guess I get it every single day somehow, because I have a chat that's live, right?
But I have mods moderating that all the time, so I don't really need to see much of it.
I think it's just pretty annoying because you get to see it all the time.
So it's become like background noise?
Yeah, a little bit. And it's, like, the same comes over and over again.
But it's usually, for me, I don't personally care that much.
I understand that other people do, especially when it comes into, like, when there's, like, a lot of sexism and stuff.
And when there's a lot of, like, men not taking women seriously.
Like, I definitely get that.
And I used to get that even more, like, a few years ago with my accent and everything.
And, like, I used to be blonde as well, like, a few months ago.
So I feel like people wouldn't take me seriously because of that.
That's a bit annoying, but I feel like it's pretty easy to see through when someone acts that way.
And for me personally, I don't really care.
But it's a bit annoying being online and getting stuff every single day.
I would say probably the worst thing is when you feel like you put in a lot of effort into some sort of work, everyone is just going to say, you just got that because you're a woman and you're attractive.
And that's probably the worst thing.
Is there a way to fight that, you think?
I don't think you can. I think it just comes up all the time.
It's just like, it is what it is, I guess.
You just gotta keep doing whatever you do and not let it emotionally control you somehow.
I think having more women in those spaces is always good.
It's probably good, yeah. Like a lot of the guys, you can tell online that they don't ever...
Don't bring on the worst ones then, Steven.
See, she just did it!
She did the misogyny thing!
By having some bad women on, she's saying all women...
Well, you know it's true.
Right? I disagree with you, and I'm older than both of you, and therefore wiser, right?
Well, combined, we're older than you.
We're one only matronomy.
Yeah, we've got combined age.
Or it could be the same thing as, like, also the age thing and, like, the woman thing.
A lot of people think that I'm just copying every single thing that he says, which I think is a bit annoying as well.
So I can never really, like...
Hassan accused her of that one.
Yeah, which has been annoying.
It was about the defunding police.
Like, my dad is a cop. I like friendship, camaraderie, and love and respect, which you...
Both have had for a time and have lost it, and I would like you to regain it.
Let's try to increase, not decrease, the amount of love in this space.
What do you think about some of the harshness of his language, which we talked about?
Our word in the past, when he used N-word, all of that kind of stuff.
What do you used to do?
I mean... No, like, what do you think about it?
Like, do you give him advice? To not speak a certain way?
No, like a little more civility.
I'm just trying to get a second opinion on this.
Second opinion about... Normie people, non-internet people, are way more extreme than...
Yeah. She's way more extreme.
No, that's not true.
Okay, so here's the thing for me, okay?
I was not online until three years ago.
At all. Like, I would watch YouTube.
That's pretty much all I would do.
I wouldn't do anything else, really.
I didn't grow up playing video games or anything.
So I'm, like, extremely new to everything.
So when I came into this world and I started seeing clips from him in the past, I don't think I really had much of an opinion because it just sounded like it was just a different, like, words that were using, but it didn't mean anything.
That's what it feels. It was just like, if you're saying the R word, it's because you just want to call someone stupid, but you want to, like, do it a little bit more.
But it's not like, it didn't feel like it was like a, it's not like racist more like, you know, it's not.
Agreement on this side here, right?
So like, if he was saying the F word because it was just like a word to like insult someone and he wasn't like, I don't think he was ever, I don't think you were ever homophobic back in the day or anything like that.
But I think it was just like a way to express yourself maybe back then.
I don't know. I didn't do it. There's no videos of me or anything because I wasn't even online back then.
Yeah. My case was, I definitely don't think Stephen is homophobic or racist or any of those, obviously.
So there's a good heart there and a good mind.
I was just saying... He just likes being mean.
Well, there is some, you lose yourself and forget the bigger picture that he's pushing for more effective discourse on the internet.
He's like an inspiration to a lot of people, especially now, of like how you can use effective conversation to make for a better world, to de-radicalize people, and so on.
And then you lose some of that power by losing yourself in like the language, just more language of emotion versus effective communication.
But it's a gray area.
I would say, like, something that is probably recently done in that case, because it's been joking about women a lot.
Like, it's women's fault, they're bad.
Like, it's just, it's been, like, a lot of jokes when it comes to misogyny, I guess, in your community.
And I think it's actually turned people a little bit that way.
That's why we've done the recent misogyny event.
Yes. So that, I guess that's actually true, because I don't think it was pretty, I don't think it was clear enough.
I don't think it actually was.
I think you did that mistake.
But I think back then I was even saying, like, hey, you should probably not, like, you probably should not do that.
Because it actually is pretty hard for me, because whenever I come into his community, like his chat, people are just going to spam.
It's like a woman moment. It's a woman moment whenever I say something, and it's kind of like, yeah, it's getting pretty annoying, as I said.
It's just annoying when you see it every single day.
There you go. Wisdom from somebody younger than you.
Wisdom can come from all kinds of people.
Yeah, of course. Just sometimes in very limited quantities, depends on the age.
You can learn something from anybody.
What advice would you give to young people, the both of you?
That you have both audiences where young people look up to you.
In general, if you were to give advice to somebody in high school, like how to create a life they can be proud of, what would you say?
The most important thing that I've learned is to view people as different and not better or worse.
And when you view people as different instead of better or worse, you learn that there's almost something that you can learn from anybody.
Like be open and empathetic towards other people's experiences.
Nobody does anything by random choice.
Like there's always reasons why people act the way they do.
And as long as you're willing to kind of like be open and receptive to the lived experiences of other people, you're going to be able to gather information and create like a more cohesive and better view of the world than any of your peers will.
Do you have any kind of advice you can give to young folks?
I feel like something that I see, especially in America a lot, is that a lot of people kind of get told what to do early on.
Like in high school, they're supposed to become this thing.
Like education-wise, they're supposed to become a doctor or this thing or whatever.
And then they kind of just give up on things that they're actually passionate about.
So I think a lot of teenagers get really confused.
They get an education and then they get that job and they hate everything.
And they think that... When they're reaching the job, when they're reaching the journey, they're going to get happy.
That's where the happiness is going to be.
But then when they get to there, they just hate everything and then they become really depressed.
And I've seen this so much.
I've seen this all the time.
And it's pretty sad to me to see so many people that are just wasting time and then they just get really confused and...
I don't know. It's the same thing with relationships too.
No one really knows what they want anymore.
I feel like everyone is just kind of doing whatever society is saying or their parents are saying or their friends are saying.
And they're never really doing anything that's super meaningful anymore.
So what I would say is try to find something that is important to you.
It could be anything really.
Some sort of passion.
Maybe your friends.
Maybe what matters to you.
Figuring those things out I think is really important.
And that comes from being able to listen to, like, some inner voice.
Yeah, I guess. It's really hard because you're living the life and, like, there's things happening around you and people tell you what to do and what not to do, you know?
No one really has, like, their own opinions.
Everyone is just kind of, like, listening to the cooler thing or, you know.
Except Steven. He seems to stand on his own.
Yeah, I guess. Free thinker.
Yeah, I'd say so. And, like, something I realized, too, like, because we just went to TwitchCon and we were talking to a lot of streamers.
What was that? It was interesting.
I thought it was interesting because the few people that seem really cool and that I look up to in the streaming world, all of them want to quit streaming.
All of them want to do it.
No one likes it.
And they're so successful.
They are around successful people.
They're working every single day.
They're working hard. They're making so much money.
Everyone is just complaining.
They're complaining about not being able to see their partner because they need to live somewhere else.
I see these things and they seem extremely unhappy, but it's so hard for them to just cut all this successful stuff off because that's what you learn to do.
That's supposed to be your happiness, but it isn't.
Everyone is really unhappy. Yeah, there's something about, maybe streaming is different, but YouTube folks too, I've interacted with a few.
Even in podcasting space, people become obsessed about the views and numbers and subscribers and stuff like that.
So I never talk about that.
I don't pay attention to that.
I feel like that's a drug that destroys...
Your mind. Your mind as an artist, ability to create truly unique things.
Also, your mind in terms of the anxiety, the ups and downs of the attention mechanism.
And then also being just, if something that you make is not popular, but it meant a lot to you, you will think of it less because it's not popular.
That's a really dangerous thing.
And because everyone around you is reinforcing, like I'll get messages like, Wow, this thing got this many views or something.
Great job. It's like, no, you don't get it.
Everyone is enforcing this language of views and likes and so on.
And it's correlated, of course, because truly impactful things will get a lot of attention often.
But it's not, on the individual local scale, like temporarily, it can really fuck with your mind.
I see that in the creators.
They become addicts to the algorithm.
Lost in chasing views.
We know friends. We know cool people.
And then they start streaming and eventually they're chasing the dragon.
And they change. It's hard to engage for them anymore.
This is something I've always said. One of the biggest blessings and biggest curses of humanity is we are very good at acclimating.
You can become paralyzed. You can have all sorts of horrible things happen to you.
And you'll get used to it. And you'll be okay.
You can have a good baseline.
But it works the other way too in that you can get more and more and more and more and you acclimate to it almost immediately.
There's like, this is a phenomenon that I bet it happens in the YouTube world, but I know it happens in the streaming world where you're streaming 1,000 viewers every day, huge event happens and you blow up and you got like 15,000 viewers for a day or two.
And then it starts to go down and down and down and down and down.
And then after all the drama started off, you're at like 3,000 concurrent viewers.
Now in the macro, you went from 1,000 to 3,000.
That feels awesome. But you actually feel like shit the whole time because you're remembering when you had 10 or 15,000 and now everything feels horrible.
And you'll see people climb over time and like, fuck, but what about that one huge stream I had?
I've never been able to...
And it's like, dude, you're doing great.
Yeah, that happens a lot.
There's so many people that we know that we find super, super cool.
They're passionate about things. They have so much interest and then they just get so addicted to these numbers and everything is just ruined.
All the cool things about them is ruined because they stop doing the things that they actually like to do something else that gives them more viewers and more money.
And it's really sad to see.
Yeah, that temporary sacrifice that seems temporary, it actually destroys you.
Like, for one time, making a choice.
Because I come across those choices often.
Like, I can do this.
You can kind of know what's going to be popular and not.
And you have to ask yourself the question, like, is this going to sacrifice?
Because if people are sacrificing intimate relationships, they're sacrificing time with their family, they're sacrificing time with things that they feel good about and that they like.
And that's something I kind of realized last year because I was working so much and I was just grinding, grinding, grinding because it was kind of new for me.
And then New Year's came by and I was like, wait, what did I even do the entire year?
I traveled to a bunch of places.
But nothing actually really meant anything to me because I felt like I was just working the entire time.
I felt like I was just numb through the entire year and I was really scary.
I rented a super pretty house for a week with my dad and my sister because I wanted to spend time with them.
But the entire time I was just streaming and I actually didn't ever calm down and just chill with them.
That's time I'll never get back.
I don't give a shit about the money that I made that week, but I lost the time.
And that is really important to me.
And a lot of people are doing that.
And I feel like, as you said, you can definitely see that in artists, for sure.
I feel like if you look at artists back in the 60s or 70s, I feel like things were just so much better back then.
And it feels like they were actually making music that meant something to them.
They were actually making art.
And I feel like today, everything is just kind of like, Whatever is cool, whatever sells, whatever sounds in a certain way, everything is kind of the same thing.
And everything that is very artistic and very cool is actually not that popular at all.
And that's kind of sad, I think.
Yeah, of course, there's now bigger mechanisms and platforms to spread stuff, music.
So as long as you can be content with not being popular, I think you can still create great art.
Yeah, but when people get a little popular, they get addicted to that so fast.
Yeah, it's weird. You have been somewhat good, at least from my outsider perspective, because I think you, I can at least imagine you making choices that could make you more popular, and you don't seem to make those choices.
I sabotaged my career, like playing lead.
But it is very intentional, like you said.
And I made that choice at every single stage of my life.
One is because from the perspective of being a carpet cleaner, my life is way better than that was or ever would have been.
So I'm already doing way better than I ever thought somebody like me ever could be.
But then two, I super love my job.
Every time I wake up, every time I fly to a place to do a podcast, every time I get to talk to really cool people, like every single part of my job.
I super like. If there's something I don't like, I just cut it off because I don't care.
Because I'm already making plenty of money doing what I do, and why would I ever wake up and not like what I'm doing when I can like what I'm doing?
How do you guys find through that, given that you love it and you sometimes maybe lose yourself in the drug of it, how do you find work-life balance together inside a relationship, like time for each other?
I don't at all, so I'm not a good person to ask.
What do you love more, Mel or Factor?
Factor is a really good game.
That's not a fair comparison, okay?
You're talking about one of the best, cleanest games, best support ever made, cleanest codebase.
It's more Factor time for me.
Starting to understand where the massaging comes from.
By the way, is Factor legit a really good game?
Yeah, of course. Do you enjoy programming?
Of course, that's all I do.
That's all. Okay. To me, programming is the game in itself that I enjoy probably more than anything else, but yeah.
It's very much a game like that.
Like, if you're into stuff like that, like, you can lose hundreds of hours, like, very quickly to, like, you have a problem, and then you think of a solution, and then you iterate on that over and over and over again in larger, larger schemes.
Sometimes you've got to redesign stuff.
Sometimes you've got, like, it's very much like that kind of game.
And so you're essentially building a factory, like, what, on a foreign planet or something like that, and it's...
Basically, it's like a bunch of, you're trying to automate different problems so that you can build bigger things, so that you can automate bigger problems, so you can build bigger things and automate bigger problems.
So it's more complicated than like a city building game, like some city type of thing?
I wouldn't say it's more complicated.
It's more, it's like, Factorio is like a game of like logic, like strictly like logic.
So you're almost like building a circuit or something.
Yes. Yeah, there's like, there's circuitry and you've got your and orgs, orgates, like there's stuff like that.
It's very much like that. What are the enemies in the game?
There are bugs that try to bite you and you can get guns and shoot and kill them.
I saw there was shooting going on.
Yeah, but that's just another problem to solve in the game, basically.
See what we did there?
We just started talking about the game as we're trying...
Oh my god, that's horrible.
Anyway, is that basically the struggle?
How to get intimate human time?
I feel like it was a little bit more in the past.
I feel like it's been better lately.
But I think it's because when we started dating, I wasn't streaming.
And I kind of just gave up my trip in New Zealand.
I gave up. I left Sweden.
So I was just in LA, which I hate.
I hate LA. I don't like LA at all.
It's hard to make friends that are real, that are into the same stuff as you.
It was just really hard for me to connect with anyone, especially also being a European and being around Americans was very strange.
So the only thing I had when I came here was him.
And I didn't expect because we had like two weeks of hanging out and like he would be on his computer sometimes and like do emails and stuff but I wasn't thinking that he would stream like 12 hours a day and it was pretty intense like in the beginning of it as well and I realized it was really hard to, like, get attention or get time because his, like, love meter would be, like, full if I was just in the house.
And that's just kind of, like, the way he is.
And for me, back then, when I didn't have anything else to do, it was kind of crazy for me.
I feel like right now, because I do work as well, and I have things going for me, and I have other friends now that I'm made, I feel like it's a lot easier.
And I can definitely enjoy just being in separate rooms and just hearing him in the background is really nice.
I can sit and paint in my room, and I will do that for hours while I'm just hearing him scream in the background.
It's kind of comforting that he's just there.
It feels nice. I like it.
Because to you, that's the sound of happiness.
Yes, because I know he's right there.
Yeah, it's nice and they'll come in and check on me sometimes.
And it's kind of like, it's actually very comforting.
It's very nice. I like it.
Yeah. I think that's kind of what a relationship is.
Like you do fun things together and you share moments together.
But also just like having someone like around you is really, really nice.
And I think that's probably, maybe it's me growing up.
Yeah. Maybe that's what it is.
And I start liking the kind of...
I feel like we're an old couple.
We're 80 and we're just around.
We don't really have to talk much.
It's nice to just do that.
And that fills your love meter?
I like this terminology.
I need both. I mean, okay.
You're making it sound like that I'm craving crazy time.
I haven't said anything. I'm not saying anything.
I haven't said a single thing at all. We're good.
I know exactly what you're thinking. There's so much judging going on.
There's no judging at all. No, but I think whenever we do plan something out, if we go on a trip every other month or once a month, I feel like usually that's enough as long as he's not playing Victoria the entire time.
If I feel like he's going on these trips with me and he's not...
Like doing things with me or he's not interested in like spending time or like being present with me, then I'll feel like I just feel like I'm just wasting time right now and then I get kind of disappointed.
But otherwise, I think this is fun.
I think this is like spending time together because we're like doing something together.
It's fun, yeah.
My love meter is full.
It's my social life.
We like to think about it that way that like I need like a little bit more of like this one thing, like quality time and he needs like almost zero quality time.
But like, let's say that we took away like physical touch, you would probably not be very happy.
So you need physical touch.
So it's not just bacteria, huh?
No. I'm a very cuddly person.
Yeah. Like cuddly and then you're like, I guess like acts of service.
Like if I do something for you, you get really happy.
Like hot chocolate. Yeah. Like if I give him hot chocolate in the morning, he gets really happy.
The actual, it's not the hot chocolate, it's the giving of the hot chocolate.
No, it's just the hot chocolate. But if she gives it to me, I didn't have to get it myself.
Maybe it's just physical touch that you like. That's really nice.
Alright, well, if you have to choose between Factorio and the drama, or political discourse.
Probably political discourse is probably my calling, but I am a good Factorio player.
Like, what role exactly does Factorio play in your streaming life?
Oh, well, right now, it's just, usually there are, like, these games that I play in the background as I have conversations, because it's hard for me to just sit on the computer and just talk, and not, like, be playing a game at the same time.
So it's just something to keep me kind of, like, occupied.
You know how some people buy, like, those little, like, widget things, I guess?
Yeah, that's what yours is. Yeah, basically, yeah.
It's like Minecraft or Factorio for me.
All right. Well, my love meter is full from this.
Mel, thank you so much for joining us.
Thank you for having me. This was really fun.
You guys are fascinating human beings.
Thank you for existing.
I'm glad to live in a world where you exist.
I can't wait to see what kind of beautiful thing you create next and the crazy kind of art that you create through the different people you interact with.
Destiny, Steven, you're an amazing human.
Thank you so much for talking to me.
It's an honor. Hope to talk with you again.
I'm talking to Ben Shapiro. You've given me a lot of inspiration.
It's an honor to talk to the Ben Shapiro of the left.
Yeah. Well, thanks a lot for having me.
I appreciate it. Thank you, guys.
Thank you. Thanks for listening to this conversation with Destiny.
To support this podcast, please check out our sponsors in the description.
And now, let me leave you with some words from Lewis Carroll.
It's no use going back to yesterday, because I was a different person then.
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